Richard Aslin is a Distinguished Research Scientist at the Haskins Laboratories in New Haven CT. Prior to joining Haskins in 2017 he was on the faculty at the University of Rochester for 33 years, where he established the Rochester BabyLab. Aslin has published widely in several sub-areas of infant development, including perceptual and motor systems, language acquisition, and statistical learning. His work on statistical learning with Jenny Saffran and Elissa Newport demonstrated the remarkable ability of infants to extract structure from rapid streams of speech by mere exposure. Subsequent work with Jozsef Fiser expanded the scope of statistical learning to the visual domain. And his work with Celeste Kidd and Steven Piantadosi documented that infants deploy their attention to auditory and visual sequences that have an intermediate (Goldilocks) level of complexity.
In the past decade, Aslin has focused on extending the statistical learning approach to grammatical category learning with Patricia Reeder and Elissa Newport, and on gathering neural measures of learning using fMRI, EEG, and fNIRS. With Lizz Karuza he has explored the neural correlates of statistical learning in both visual and auditory domains using fMRI. His fNIRS work with Lauren Emberson and Ben Zinszer has shown that the infant brain deploys predictive signals to encode expected events and that fNIRS has sufficient fidelity to “decode” stimulus conditions (e.g., word meanings) on a trial-by-trial basis. With Elika Bergelson he has shown that infants’ earliest words are organized on the basis of semantic relatedness.
His interest in bilingualism has grown in the past few years as he deploys machine learning techniques to characterize the connectivity differences between bilingual and monolingual brains with Sara Sanchez-Alonso and Monica Rosenberg. Aslin has been the recipient of several major awards, including the APA Distinguished Scientific Contributions Award (2014) and the APS Mentor Award for Lifetime Achievement (2015), and several honors, including election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2006) and the National Academy of Sciences (2013).