Tamura Niina, Castles Anne, Nation Kate
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, 9 South Parks Road, Oxford OX13UD, UK.
ARC Centre for Cognition and its Disorders, Macquarie University, Australian Hearing Hub, 16 University Avenue, NSW 2109, Australia; Department of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, Australian Hearing Hub, 16 University Avenue, NSW 2109, Australia.
Cognition. 2017 Jun;163:93-102. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.03.002. Epub 2017 Mar 15.
Children learn new words via their everyday reading experience but little is known about how this learning happens. We addressed this by focusing on the conditions needed for new words to become familiar to children, drawing a distinction between lexical configuration (the acquisition of word knowledge) and lexical engagement (the emergence of interactive processes between newly learned words and existing words). In Experiment 1, 9-11-year-olds saw unfamiliar words in one of two storybook conditions, differing in degree of focus on the new words but matched for frequency of exposure. Children showed good learning of the novel words in terms of both configuration (form and meaning) and engagement (lexical competition). A frequency manipulation under incidental learning conditions in Experiment 2 revealed different time-courses of learning: a fast lexical configuration process, indexed by explicit knowledge, and a slower lexicalization process, indexed by lexical competition.
儿童通过日常阅读体验学习新单词,但对于这种学习是如何发生的却知之甚少。我们通过关注新单词为儿童所熟悉所需的条件来解决这个问题,区分了词汇配置(单词知识的习得)和词汇运用(新学单词与现有单词之间互动过程的出现)。在实验1中,9至11岁的儿童在两种故事书条件之一中看到不熟悉的单词,这两种条件在对新单词的关注程度上有所不同,但暴露频率相匹配。儿童在配置(形式和意义)和运用(词汇竞争)方面都对新单词有良好的学习效果。实验2中在偶然学习条件下的频率操纵揭示了不同的学习时间进程:一个由显性知识索引的快速词汇配置过程,以及一个由词汇竞争索引的较慢的词汇化过程。