The sound of silence : Reconsidering infants’ object categorization in silence, with labels, and with nonlinguistic sounds

Chan, Jacky and Shaw, Phoebe and Westermann, Gert (2023) The sound of silence : Reconsidering infants’ object categorization in silence, with labels, and with nonlinguistic sounds. Cognition, 237: 105475. ISSN 0010-0277

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Abstract

A large body of research based on a specific stimulus set (dinosaur/fish) has argued that auditory labels and novel communicative signals (such as beeps used in a communicative context) facilitate category formation in infants, that such effects can be attributed to the auditory signals' communicative nature, and that other auditory stimuli have no effect on categorization. A contrasting view, the auditory overshadowing hypothesis, maintains that auditory signals disrupt processing of visual information and, therefore, interfere with categorization, with more unfamiliar sounds having a more disruptive effect than familiar ones. Here, we used the dinosaur/fish stimulus set to test these contrasting theories in two experiments. In Experiment 1 (N = 17), we found that 6-month-old infants were able to form categories of these stimuli in silence, weakening the claim that labels facilitated their categorization in infants. These results imply that prior findings of no categorization of these stimuli in the presence of nonlinguistic sounds must be due to disruptive effects of such sounds. In Experiment 2 (N = 17), we showed that familiarity modulated the disruptive effect of nonlinguistic sounds on infants' categorization of these stimuli. Together, these results support the auditory overshadowing hypothesis and provide new insights into the interaction between visual and auditory information in infants' category formation.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Cognition
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/yes_externally_funded
Subjects:
?? nfant categorizationlabelsinfant cognitive developmentauditory overshadowingyes - externally fundedyeslinguistics and languagecognitive neuroscienceexperimental and cognitive psychologylanguage and linguistics ??
ID Code:
192324
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
10 May 2023 08:55
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
03 Jan 2024 10:05