Synthetic grammar learning: Implicit rule abstraction or explicit fragmentary knowledge

Catégorie

Journal Article

Auteurs

Perruchet, P., Pacteau, C.

Année

1990

Titre

Synthetic grammar learning: Implicit rule abstraction or explicit fragmentary knowledge

Journal / Livre / Conférence

Journal of Experimental Psychology: General

Résumé

Three experiments were designed to demonstrate that classifying new letter strings as grammatical (i.e., conforming to a set of rules called a synthetic grammar) or ungrammatical may proceed from fragmentary conscious knowledge of the bigrams constituting the grammatical strings displayed in the study phase, rather than from an unconscious structured representation of the grammar, as Reber (1989) contended.
In Experiment 1, grammaticality judgments of subjects initially studying grammatical letter strings did not differ from judgments by subjects learning from a list of the bigrams making up these strings. In Experiment 2, judgments about nongrammatical strings composed of valid bigrams placed in invalid locations were extremely poor, although better than chance. In Experiment 3 the explicit knowledge of bigrams as assessed by a recognition procedure appeared sufficient to account for observed performance on a standard test of grammaticality.

Issue

3

Volume

119

Pages

264-275

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