韵律在单词学习中的促进作用:行为和事件相关的潜在证据。

IF 2.2
Tengwen Fan, Will Decker, Jacob P Momsen, Eileen Haebig, Julie M Schneider
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:押韵增加了个人听到的短语的音韵相似性,并增强了工作记忆的回忆。本研究探讨了押韵是否有助于单词学习,并探讨了押韵促进单词学习的潜在神经机制。方法:57名成年人完成了一个单词学习任务,他们被暴露在15个非单词(NWs)中,每个4次,在句子的最后位置,并记录他们的脑电图。参与者被随机分配到押韵组或不押韵组,在暴露阶段,NWs分别与句子中的主要真实单词押韵或不押韵。然后测试受试者对NWs的识别能力。结果:有韵组和无韵组在NW识别任务上的行为正确率无显著差异;然而,押韵组在早期接触阶段表现出了增强的双侧P2,这与对语音和语义特征的更多关注有关。相比之下,无韵组在后期暴露阶段的左中央顶叶部位的N400振幅减弱,这与NWs的语义检索有关。结论:这些研究结果表明,韵脚可以通过对音韵和语义信息的注意来促进词义的编码;然而,没有押韵并不妨碍成年人将意思映射到新单词的能力。补充资料:https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.29737478。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Facilitatory Role of Rhyme During Word Learning: Behavioral and Event-Related Potential Evidence.

Purpose: Rhyme increases the phonological similarity of phrases individuals hear and enhances recall from working memory. This study explores whether rhyme aids word learning and examines the underlying neural mechanisms through which rhyme facilitates word learning.

Method: Fifty-seven adults completed a word learning task where they were exposed to 15 nonwords (NWs), four times each, in the sentence-final position as their electroencephalogram was recorded. Participants were randomly assigned to either a Rhyme or No-Rhyme group, where the NWs rhymed or did not rhyme with a prime real word in the sentence, respectively, during the exposure phase. Subjects were then tested on their recognition of the NWs.

Results: Behavioral accuracy on the NW recognition task did not differ between the Rhyme and No-Rhyme groups; however, the Rhyme group showed an enhanced bilateral P2 in the early exposure phase, which has been linked to increased attention to the phonological and semantic features of speech. By contrast, the No-Rhyme group showed an attenuated N400 amplitude at left centroparietal sites in the later exposure phase, related to semantic retrieval of NWs.

Conclusion: These findings indicate that rhyme may facilitate encoding of word meaning via attention to both phonology and semantic information; however, the absence of rhyme does not hinder adults' ability to map meaning to novel words.

Supplemental material: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.29737478.

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