Infants, children and adults are capable of implicitly
extracting regularities from their environment through
statistical learning (SL). SL is present from early infancy and
found across tasks and modalities, raising questions about the
domain generality of SL. However, little is known about its’
developmental trajectory: Is SL fully developed capacity in
infancy, or does it improve with age, like other cognitive
skills? While SL is well established in infants and adults, only
few studies have looked at SL across development with
conflicting results: some find age-related improvements while
others do not. Importantly, despite its postulated role in
language learning, no study has examined the developmental
trajectory of auditory SL throughout childhood. Here, we
conduct a large-scale study of children's auditory SL across a
wide age-range (5-12y, N=115). Results show that auditory
SL does not change much across development. We discuss
implications for modality-based differences in SL and for its
role in language acquisition.