Incidental Nonspeech Auditory Learning Scaffolds Phonetic, Category, and Word Learning in a Foreign Language Classroom

IF 3.5 1区 文学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Language Learning Pub Date : 2025-01-11 DOI:10.1111/lang.12700
Seth Wiener, Timothy K. Murphy, Lori L. Holt
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Abstract

There is considerable lab‐based evidence for successful incidental learning, in which a learner's attention is directed away from the to‐be‐learned stimulus and towards another stimulus. In this study, we extend incidental learning research into the language learning classroom. Three groups of adult second language (L2) learners (N = 52) engaged in structured classroom Mandarin learning took part in an 8‐week study. One group served as a classroom‐only control group. The second group underwent additional intentional auditory training involving Mandarin speech and explicit feedback. The third group underwent additional incidental learning combined with nonspeech “perceptual building block” categories—categories that share critical perceptual dimensions with target L2 speech categories but that are not perceived as speech. We demonstrate that when supplemented with structured classroom learning, incidental learning involving nonspeech analogs promotes phonetic, category, and word learning equivalent to learning from more traditional intentional auditory training.
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附带非言语听觉学习在外语课堂中为语音、类别和单词学习架起了桥梁
有相当多的基于实验室的证据表明,偶然学习是成功的,在这种情况下,学习者的注意力从要学习的刺激转移到另一个刺激上。在本研究中,我们将附带学习的研究扩展到语言学习课堂。参与结构化课堂汉语学习的三组成人第二语言学习者(N = 52)参加了一项为期8周的研究。其中一组作为只在教室上课的对照组。第二组接受额外的有意识的听觉训练,包括普通话演讲和明确的反馈。第三组接受了额外的附带学习,并结合了非语言的“感知构建块”类别——与目标二语语言类别共享关键感知维度,但不被视为语言的类别。我们证明,当辅以结构化的课堂学习时,涉及非言语类比的附带学习促进了语音、类别和单词的学习,相当于从更传统的有意听觉训练中学习。
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来源期刊
Language Learning
Language Learning Multiple-
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
15.90%
发文量
65
期刊介绍: Language Learning is a scientific journal dedicated to the understanding of language learning broadly defined. It publishes research articles that systematically apply methods of inquiry from disciplines including psychology, linguistics, cognitive science, educational inquiry, neuroscience, ethnography, sociolinguistics, sociology, and anthropology. It is concerned with fundamental theoretical issues in language learning such as child, second, and foreign language acquisition, language education, bilingualism, literacy, language representation in mind and brain, culture, cognition, pragmatics, and intergroup relations. A subscription includes one or two annual supplements, alternating among a volume from the Language Learning Cognitive Neuroscience Series, the Currents in Language Learning Series or the Language Learning Special Issue Series.
期刊最新文献
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