Distributional learning in adults and infants Karin Wanrooij Paul Boersma Titia van Zuijen 10.6084/m9.figshare.1157804.v5 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Distributional_learning_in_adults_and_infants/1157804 <p><strong>1. The experiment<br></strong>The experiment is described in detail in the following publication:<br>Wanrooij, Boersma & Van Zuijen (under review; details will follow soon).<br><br><strong>2. The dataset<br></strong>This dataset consists of EEG-recordings (39 files in BDF-format) and a table (4 files = the same table in four formats: PDF, TXT, CSV and XLSX).<br><br><strong>2.1. The EEG recordings<br></strong>The 39 files with EEG recordings are the files for the adults (= 1 file per participant).<br>The files for the infants can be found here: http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1157812.<br><br>Each of the 39 files is a recording of an adult participant’s EEG during a discrimination test after distributional vowel training. In the discrimination test, the mismatch response (MMR) was measured in an oddball paradigm.<br><br>The files were recorded with a Biosemi Active Two system (Biosemi Instrumentation BV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands), and downsampled from 8 kHz to 512 Hz (with Biosemi Decimator 86).<br><br><strong>2.2. The table<br></strong>The table presents the following data per adult and infant participant: the identification number (ID), the age group (infant or adult), the experimental condition as specified by the Distribution Type (unimodal or bimodal) and the Standard Stimulus ([ε] or [æ]), and the results of our measurements as represented in the mean amplitude of the mismatch response (in microvolt).<br>The ID corresponds to the name of the BDF-files.</p> 2014-09-02 14:22:52 distributional learning statistical learning EEG infants Neuroscience Developmental and Educational Psychology Neuroscience and Physiological Psychology Linguistics