Tamminen Jakke, Gaskell M Gareth
Department of Psychology, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UK.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2008 Mar;61(3):361-71. doi: 10.1080/17470210701634545.
Newly learned spoken words (e.g., "cathedruke") become fully engaged in the mental lexicon, as measured via lexical competition with their pre-existing phonological neighbours (e.g., "cathedral"), over the course of several hours or days, and this lexical restructuring is associated with sleep (Dumay & Gaskell, 2007). Here, we investigated the longer-term effects of word learning for three sets of novel words learned at different times using phoneme monitoring and repetition tasks. The effects of these exposure sessions on lexical memory were assessed in a battery of tests. Lexical decision latencies to pre-existing neighbouring words showed that lexical competition effects for the novel words remained observable 8 months after initial exposure. Furthermore, the order-of-acquisition of the novel words affected their production speed (but not recognition speed), with an advantage for earlier acquired words. The results suggest that the consolidation of novel words results in a long-term and stable change in the lexical competition process.
新学的口语词汇(例如“cathedruke”)会在数小时或数天的时间里,通过与已有的语音相近词(例如“cathedral”)进行词汇竞争的方式,完全融入心理词库,而且这种词汇结构的重组与睡眠有关(杜梅 & 加斯克尔,2007)。在此,我们使用音素监测和重复任务,研究了在不同时间学习的三组新单词的长期学习效果。通过一系列测试评估了这些接触环节对词汇记忆的影响。对已有相邻词的词汇判断潜伏期表明,新单词的词汇竞争效应在初次接触8个月后仍可观察到。此外,新单词的习得顺序影响其产出速度(但不影响识别速度),较早习得的单词具有优势。结果表明,新单词的巩固会导致词汇竞争过程发生长期且稳定的变化。