Chotiga Pattamadilok, Pauline Welby, Michael D Tyler
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We also assessed participants' auditory-only discrimination of the /θ/-/f/ contrast pretraining and posttraining. During training, the visual cues facilitated novel word learning beyond the benefit of the auditory input alone. However, these additional benefits did not persist when participants' discrimination and novel word learning performance were assessed immediately after training. Most interestingly, after a night's sleep, participants who were exposed to orthography during training showed significant improvement in both discrimination and novel word learning compared to the previous day. The findings are discussed in terms of online versus residual impacts of articulatory gestures and orthography on speech processing. While both visual cues are beneficial when they are simultaneously presented with speech, only orthography shows residual impacts leading to a sleep-dependent enhancement of lexical knowledge through memory consolidation and retuning of the second language /θ/-/f/ contrast. 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引用次数: 3
摘要
听觉语言似乎通过不同的机制与视觉发音手势和正字法联系在一起。然而,这两种类型的视觉信息对语音处理都有很大的影响。本研究使用一种新的单词学习范式直接比较了他们对语音处理的贡献。熟悉英语的法语母语者在以下三种暴露条件之一下学习了包含英语/θ/-/f/音位对比的最小对英语新单词:(a)单独的新单词的听觉形式,(b)与发音手势相关的听觉形式,或(c)与正字法相关的听觉形式。在训练期间和两个训练后视觉线索不再可用的时间点比较这三种方法的益处。我们还评估了受试者在训练前和训练后对/θ/-/f/对比度的听觉辨别。在训练过程中,视觉线索比单纯的听觉输入更有利于新单词的学习。然而,当参与者的辨别能力和新单词学习表现在训练后立即被评估时,这些额外的好处并没有持续下去。最有趣的是,经过一晚的睡眠,在训练中接触正字法的参与者在辨别和新单词学习方面都比前一天有了显著的提高。本研究结果讨论了发音手势和正字法对语音处理的在线影响和残余影响。当这两种视觉线索与语言同时出现时,它们都是有益的,只有正字法显示出残留的影响,导致睡眠依赖的词汇知识通过记忆巩固和第二语言的回归而增强。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
The contribution of visual articulatory gestures and orthography to speech processing: Evidence from novel word learning.
Auditory speech appears to be linked to visual articulatory gestures and orthography through different mechanisms. Yet, both types of visual information have a strong influence on speech processing. The present study directly compared their contributions to speech processing using a novel word learning paradigm. Native speakers of French, who were familiar with English, learned minimal pairs of novel English words containing the English /θ/-/f/ phonemic contrast under one of three exposure conditions: (a) the auditory forms of novel words alone, (b) the auditory forms associated with articulatory gestures, or (c) the auditory forms associated with orthography. The benefits of the three methods were compared during training and at two posttraining time points where the visual cues were no longer available. We also assessed participants' auditory-only discrimination of the /θ/-/f/ contrast pretraining and posttraining. During training, the visual cues facilitated novel word learning beyond the benefit of the auditory input alone. However, these additional benefits did not persist when participants' discrimination and novel word learning performance were assessed immediately after training. Most interestingly, after a night's sleep, participants who were exposed to orthography during training showed significant improvement in both discrimination and novel word learning compared to the previous day. The findings are discussed in terms of online versus residual impacts of articulatory gestures and orthography on speech processing. While both visual cues are beneficial when they are simultaneously presented with speech, only orthography shows residual impacts leading to a sleep-dependent enhancement of lexical knowledge through memory consolidation and retuning of the second language /θ/-/f/ contrast. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).