文本增强、非文本增强和无字幕条件下工作记忆在注意分配和语法发展中的作用

Minjin Lee, A. Révész
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究探讨了工作记忆(WM)的个体差异在有或没有文本增强的字幕对注意分配和二语语法发展的影响中的中介作用,以及在没有字幕的情况下,WM记忆是否会影响二语发展。我们采用前测后测延迟后测设计,将72名韩国英语学习者随机分为三组。在治疗过程中,两组人看的新闻片段是没有字幕的,有文字增强的,还是没有文字增强的。我们用眼球追踪的方法来测量注意力分配,并通过口头、书面和填空测试来评估发展。为了评估WM的各个方面,我们采用了语音和视觉短期记忆(PSTM, VSTM)以及更新、任务切换和抑制控制的执行功能的测量。我们发现,在两个字幕组中,较高的PSTM与较高的口腔生产收益相关。对于增强的字幕组,PSTM也与书面生产测试的收益呈正相关。然而,没有字幕组的参与者表现出VSTM和口腔产量增加之间的积极联系。在强化字幕条件下,注意定位仅与更新能力和PSTM呈正相关。综上所述,WM可以调节字幕对注意力和第二语言发展的影响,并且在不同的字幕条件下,不同的WM成分可能会发挥不同的作用。
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The Role of Working Memory in Attentional Allocation and Grammatical Development under Textually-enhanced, Unenhanced and No Captioning Conditions
This study investigated the extent to which individual differences in working memory (WM) mediate the effects of captions with or without textual enhancement on attentional allocation and L2 grammatical development, and whether L2 development is influenced by WM memory in the absence of captions. We employed a pretest-posttest-delayed posttest design, with 72 Korean learners of English randomly assigned to three groups. The groups differed as to whether they were exposed to news clips without captions, with textually-enhanced captions, or with unenhanced captions during the treatment. We measured attentional allocation with eye-tracking methodology, and assessed development with an oral production, a written production and a fill-in-the-blank test. To assess various aspects of WM, we employed measures of phonological and visual short-term memory (PSTM, VSTM) and the executive functions of updating, task-switching, and inhibitory control. We found that, in both captions groups, higher PSTM was associated with higher oral production gains. For the enhanced captions group, PSTM was also positively related to gains on the written production test. Participants in the no-captions group, however, showed a positive link between VSTM and oral production gains. Attentional location only correlated positively with updating ability and PSTM under the enhanced captions condition. These results, overall, indicate that WM can moderate the effects of captions on attention and L2 development, and various WM components may play a differential role under various captioning conditions.
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