Childers Jane B, Warkentin Emily, Porter Blaire M, Young Marissa, Lalani Sneh, Gopalkrishnan Akila
Department of Psychology, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212, USA.
Brain Sci. 2022 Mar 3;12(3):344. doi: 10.3390/brainsci12030344.
Verbs are central to the syntactic structure of sentences, and, thus, important for learning one's native language. This study examined how children visually inspect events as they hear, and do not hear, a new verb. Specifically, there is evidence that children may focus on the agent of the action or may prioritize attention to the action being performed; to date, little evidence is available. This study used an eye tracker to track 2-, 3-, and 4-year-olds' looking to the agent (i.e., face) vs. action (i.e., hands) while viewing events linked to a new verb as well as distractor events. A Tobii X30 eye tracker recorded children's fixations to AOIs (head/face and hands) as they watched three target events and two distractor events in different orders during the learning phase, and pointed to one of two events in two test trials. This was repeated for a second novel verb. Pointing results show that children in all age groups were able to learn and extend the new verbs to new events at test. Additionally, across age groups, when viewing target events, children increased their looking to the hands (where the action is taking place) as those trials progressed and decreased their looking to the agents' face, which is less informative for learning a new verb's meaning. In contrast, when viewing distractor events, children decreased their looking to hands over trials and maintained their attention to the face. In summary, children's visual attention to agents' faces and hands differed depending on whether the events cooccurred with the new verb. These results are important as this is the first study to show this pattern of visual attention during verb learning, and, thus, these results help reveal underlying attentional strategies children may use when learning verbs.
动词是句子句法结构的核心,因此对于学习母语很重要。本研究考察了儿童在听到和未听到一个新动词时如何视觉检查事件。具体而言,有证据表明儿童可能会关注动作的施事者,或者可能会优先关注正在执行的动作;迄今为止,相关证据很少。本研究使用眼动仪追踪2岁、3岁和4岁儿童在观看与新动词相关的事件以及干扰事件时看向施事者(即面部)与动作(即手部)的情况。在学习阶段,Tobii X30眼动仪记录了儿童在以不同顺序观看三个目标事件和两个干扰事件时对感兴趣区域(头部/面部和手部)的注视情况,并在两次测试试验中指向两个事件中的一个。对第二个新动词重复此过程。指向结果表明,所有年龄组的儿童在测试时都能够学习新动词并将其扩展到新事件。此外,在所有年龄组中,当观看目标事件时,随着试验的进行,儿童看向手部(动作发生的部位)的次数增加,而看向施事者面部的次数减少,面部对于学习新动词的意义信息较少。相比之下,当观看干扰事件时,儿童在试验过程中看向手部的次数减少,并保持对面部的关注。总之,儿童对施事者面部和手部的视觉注意力因事件是否与新动词同时出现而有所不同。这些结果很重要,因为这是第一项展示动词学习过程中这种视觉注意力模式的研究,因此,这些结果有助于揭示儿童在学习动词时可能使用的潜在注意力策略。