说话人信度对成人跨情境词汇学习的影响

N. Rivera-Vera, Sible Andringa, Edmundo Kronmüller, P. Monaghan, J. Rispens
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引用次数: 0

摘要

单词学习以口语单词和潜在指称物之间的统计共现为指导,通过这种共现,学习者逐渐将标签映射到不同情况下的对象。鉴于单词学习不是在真空中进行的,而是在交际环境中进行的,因此评估说话者所扮演的角色是相关的。因为我们不会平等地评估每个人提供的信息,所以我们有理由认为,犯词汇错误的人不是一个可靠的演讲者,从他那里学习新单词。目前研究的重点是成人跨情景词汇学习中的说话人信度。在两个实验中,我们调查了成人在多大程度上关注说话人的可靠性,以及这如何影响CSWL任务中的单词学习。我们改变了说话者将新单词映射到熟悉物体的一致性。我们假设(1)说话者的可靠性会根据他们过去的对象标记准确性而被不同地判断,(2)当一个不可靠的说话者呈现新单词时,他们会更难以学习。实验1显示,与可靠的说话者相比,不可靠的说话者被评估为不可靠,但在实验2中,当参与者由两个说话者(一个可靠的和一个不可靠的)教授新单词时,这种效应消失了。此外,我们没有发现证据支持暴露于不可靠的说话者会损害成人CSWL的假设。我们讨论了这些发现的相关性以及进一步研究说话人信度在CSWL中的作用的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The effect of speaker reliability on adult cross-situational word learning
Word learning is guided by the statistical co-occurrence between spoken words and potential referents, through which learners gradually map labels to objects across situations. Given that word learning does not occur in a vacuum, rather in a communicative context, it is relevant to evaluate the role that speakers play. Because we do not evaluate the information provided by every person equally, it is reasonable to think that someone who makes lexical errors is not a reliable speaker from whom to learn new words. The current study focuses on speaker reliability in adult cross-situational word learning (CSWL). In two experiments we investigated the extent to  which  adults  attend  to  the  reliability  of  the  speaker  and  how  this  affects  word  learning  in  a CSWL task. We varied the consistency with which a speaker mapped novel words to familiar objects. We hypothesized (1) that the speakers’ reliability would be judged differently depending on their past object-labeling accuracy, and (2) that new words would be more difficult to learn when  presented  by  an  unreliable  speaker.  Experiment  1  shows  that  the  unreliable  speaker  was  assessed  as  less  reliable,  compared  to  the  reliable  speaker,  but  this  effect  disappeared  in  Experiment  2,  when  participants  were  taught  new  words  by  two  speakers,  a  reliable  and  an  unreliable  one.  Furthermore,  we  found  no  evidence  to  support  the  hypothesis  that  being  exposed  to  an  unreliable  speaker  impairs  CSWL  in  adults.  We  discuss  the  relevance  of  these  findings and the importance of further research on the role of speaker reliability in CSWL.
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