How iconicity helps people learn new words: neural correlates and individual differences in sound-symbolic bootstrapping.

Collabra Pub Date : 2016-07-06 DOI:10.1525/COLLABRA.42
Gwilym Lockwood, P. Hagoort, Mark Dingemanse
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引用次数: 43

Abstract

Sound symbolism is increasingly understood as involving iconicity, or perceptual analogies and cross-modal correspondences between form and meaning, but the search for its functional and neural correlates is ongoing. Here we study how people learn sound-symbolic words, using behavioural, electrophysiological and individual difference measures. Dutch participants learned Japanese ideophones —lexical sound- symbolic words— with a translation of either the real meaning (in which form and meaning show cross-modal correspondences) or the opposite meaning (in which form and meaning show cross-modal clashes). Participants were significantly better at identifying the words they learned in the real condition, correctly remembering the real word pairing 86.7% of the time, but the opposite word pairing only 71.3% of the time. Analysing event-related potentials (ERPs) during the test round showed that ideophones in the real condition elicited a greater P3 component and late positive complex than ideophones in the opposite condition. In a subsequent forced choice task, participants were asked to guess the real translation from two alternatives. They did this with 73.0% accuracy, well above chance level even for words they had encountered in the opposite condition, showing that people are generally sensitive to the sound-symbolic cues in ideophones. Individual difference measures showed that the ERP effect in the test round of the learning task was greater for participants who were more sensitive to sound symbolism in the forced choice task. The main driver of the difference was a lower amplitude of the P3 component in response to ideophones in the opposite condition, suggesting that people who are more sensitive to sound symbolism may have more difficulty to suppress conflicting cross-modal information. The findings provide new evidence that cross-modal correspondences between sound and meaning facilitate word learning, while cross-modal clashes make word learning harder, especially for people who are more sensitive to sound symbolism.
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象似性如何帮助人们学习新单词:声音符号引导的神经关联和个体差异。
声音象征主义越来越多地被理解为涉及象似性,或感性类比和形式与意义之间的跨模态对应,但对其功能和神经相关性的研究仍在进行中。在这里,我们研究人们如何学习声音符号词,使用行为,电生理和个体差异测量。荷兰的参与者学习日语意指音——词汇的声音——象征性的词——通过翻译真实的意思(形式和意义表现出跨模态对应)或相反的意思(形式和意义表现出跨模态冲突)。参与者在识别他们在真实条件下学习的单词方面明显更好,正确记住真实单词配对的准确率为86.7%,而相反单词配对的准确率仅为71.3%。事件相关电位(ERPs)分析表明,真实条件下的听音者比相反条件下的听音者诱发了更大的P3分量和晚期正复合体。在随后的强制选择任务中,参与者被要求从两个选项中猜测真实的翻译。他们的准确率为73.0%,甚至远高于他们在相反条件下遇到的单词的概率水平,这表明人们通常对表意语音中的声音符号线索很敏感。个体差异测量显示,在学习任务的测试回合中,对强迫选择任务中声音象征主义更敏感的参与者的ERP效应更大。造成这种差异的主要原因是,在相反的情况下,听音者的P3分量的振幅较低,这表明对声音象征主义更敏感的人可能更难以抑制相互冲突的跨模态信息。这些发现提供了新的证据,证明声音和意义之间的跨模态对应有助于单词学习,而跨模态冲突会使单词学习变得更加困难,尤其是对声音象征主义更敏感的人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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