Change is hard: Individual differences in children's lexical processing and executive functions after a shift in dimensions.

IF 1.5 2区 文学 N/A LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Ron Pomper, Margarita Kaushanskaya, Jenny Saffran
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Language comprehension involves cognitive abilities that are specific to language as well as cognitive abilities that are more general and involved in a wide range of behaviors. One set of domain-general abilities that support language comprehension are executive functions (EFs), also known as cognitive control. A diverse body of research has demonstrated that EFs support language comprehension when there is conflict between competing, incompatible interpretations of temporarily ambiguous words or phrases. By engaging EFs, children and adults are able to select or bias their attention towards the correct interpretation. However, the degree to which language processing engages EFs in the absence of ambiguity is poorly understood. In the current experiment, we tested whether EFs may be engaged when comprehending speech that does not elicit conflicting interpretations. Different components of EFs were measured using several behavioral tasks and language comprehension was measured using an eye-tracking procedure. Five-year-old children (n=56) saw pictures of familiar objects and heard sentences identifying the objects using either their names or colors. After a series of objects were identified using one dimension, children were significantly less accurate in fixating target objects that were identified using a second dimension. Further results reveal that this decrease in accuracy does not occur because children struggle to shift between dimensions, but rather because they are unable to predict which dimension will be used. These effects of predictability are related to individual differences in children's EFs. Taken together, these findings suggest that EFs may be more broadly involved when children comprehend language, even in instances that do not require conflict resolution.

Abstract Image

改变是困难的:维度转换后儿童词汇加工和执行功能的个体差异。
语言理解既包括特定于语言的认知能力,也包括更普遍的、涉及广泛行为的认知能力。一组支持语言理解的领域通用能力是执行功能(EFs),也被称为认知控制。各种各样的研究表明,当对暂时模棱两可的单词或短语的相互竞争、不相容的解释之间存在冲突时,EFs支持语言理解。通过参与ef,儿童和成人能够选择或将注意力偏向于正确的解释。然而,在没有歧义的情况下,语言处理涉及EFs的程度却知之甚少。在当前的实验中,我们测试了ef在理解不引起冲突解释的语音时是否会被使用。ef的不同组成部分是通过几个行为任务来测量的,语言理解是通过眼球追踪程序来测量的。5岁的孩子(n=56)看熟悉物体的图片,听用名字或颜色识别物体的句子。在用一个维度识别一系列物体后,儿童在注视用第二个维度识别的目标物体时的准确性明显降低。进一步的结果表明,这种准确性的下降并不是因为孩子们很难在不同的维度之间转换,而是因为他们无法预测哪个维度将被使用。这些可预测性的影响与儿童情感表现的个体差异有关。综上所述,这些发现表明,当儿童理解语言时,即使在不需要解决冲突的情况下,ef也可能更广泛地参与其中。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
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