Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, CT, United States of America.
NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 Jun 15;17(6):e0269242. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269242. eCollection 2022.
A central question in understanding human language is how people store, access, and comprehend words. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic presented a natural experiment to investigate whether language comprehension can be changed in a lasting way by external experiences. We leveraged the sudden increase in the frequency of certain words (mask, isolation, lockdown) to investigate the effects of rapid contextual changes on word comprehension, measured over 10 months within the first year of the pandemic. Using the phonemic restoration paradigm, in which listeners are presented with ambiguous auditory input and report which word they hear, we conducted four online experiments with adult participants across the United States (combined N = 899). We find that the pandemic has reshaped language processing for the long term, changing how listeners process speech and what they expect from ambiguous input. These results show that abrupt changes in linguistic exposure can cause enduring changes to the language system.
理解人类语言的一个核心问题是人们如何存储、访问和理解单词。正在进行的 COVID-19 大流行提供了一个自然实验,以调查语言理解是否可以通过外部经验以持久的方式改变。我们利用某些单词(口罩、隔离、封锁)的频率突然增加,来调查快速的上下文变化对单词理解的影响,这是在大流行第一年的 10 个月内进行的测量。我们使用语音恢复范式,在此范式中,听众会听到模棱两可的听觉输入,并报告他们听到的单词,我们在美国各地进行了四个针对成年参与者的在线实验(总共 N = 899)。我们发现,大流行已经从长远上重塑了语言处理,改变了听众处理语音的方式以及他们对模棱两可输入的期望。这些结果表明,语言接触的突然变化会导致语言系统发生持久变化。