Matti Laine, Claudia Peñaloza, Tilda Eräste, Anton Kunnari, Antoni Rodríguez‐Fornells
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Spontaneous Strategies Used During Novel Word Learning
This online study examined spontaneous strategies of English‐speaking adults during associative word learning, the relationship of these strategies with learning outcomes and within‐task evolution of strategy use. Participants were to learn to name 14 object–pseudoword pairs across five successive encoding/recall blocks, followed by delayed recall 2 days later. Participants (n = 210) were randomized to learn novel object–pseudoword associations (n = 93) or familiar object–pseudoword associations (n = 117). Open‐ended strategy reports followed each block. The participants’ learning curves were similar in both conditions. Most participants in both groups (60–70%) reported strategy use, with some qualitative group differences in preferred strategy types. Manipulation strategies like creating associations were related to superior performance in the first learning blocks but did not predict better delayed recall. Strategic choices gradually stabilized during learning. Our results show the prevalence of associative strategies when adults learn new word–referent mappings and highlight the importance of strategy use in individual differences in the progress of learning.
期刊介绍:
Language Learning is a scientific journal dedicated to the understanding of language learning broadly defined. It publishes research articles that systematically apply methods of inquiry from disciplines including psychology, linguistics, cognitive science, educational inquiry, neuroscience, ethnography, sociolinguistics, sociology, and anthropology. It is concerned with fundamental theoretical issues in language learning such as child, second, and foreign language acquisition, language education, bilingualism, literacy, language representation in mind and brain, culture, cognition, pragmatics, and intergroup relations. A subscription includes one or two annual supplements, alternating among a volume from the Language Learning Cognitive Neuroscience Series, the Currents in Language Learning Series or the Language Learning Special Issue Series.