Emily M. Akers, Katherine J. Midgley, Phillip J. Holcomb, Karen Emmorey
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引用次数: 0
摘要
标志性有助于学习手语,但从手语形式中识别意义是否会自动发生,目前尚不清楚。我们记录了一组知道会有人教他们学习手语(学习者)和另一组不知道会有人教他们学习手语(非学习者)的人在看到高图标性(透明)和非图标性 ASL 手势时的 ERPs。参与者观看手势视频,并检测偶尔出现的梳理手势(无需进行语义处理)。在手势开始之前,学习者与非学习者相比,对两种手势类型都表现出更大的额叶负性,这可能是由于学习者有更大的动力去注意手势。在 N400 窗口期间,学习者对标志性手势的负性大于非标志性手势,这表明他们对标志性手势进行了更多的语义加工。而非学习者的图标性效应出现得更晚,也更弱。两组在任务表现或 P3 振幅方面没有差异。我们的结论是,理解高度标志性符号的形式-意义映射不是自动的,需要动机和注意力。
Semantic processing of iconic signs is not automatic: Neural evidence from hearing non-signers
Iconicity facilitates learning signs, but it is unknown whether recognition of meaning from the sign form occurs automatically. We recorded ERPs to highly iconic (transparent) and non-iconic ASL signs presented to one group who knew they would be taught signs (learners) and another group with no such expectations (non-learners). Participants watched sign videos and detected an occasional grooming gesture (no semantic processing required). Before sign onset, learners showed a greater frontal negativity compared to non-learners for both sign types, possibly due to greater motivation to attend to signs. During the N400 window, learners showed greater negativity to iconic than non-iconic signs, indicating more semantic processing for iconic signs. The non-learners showed a later and much weaker iconicity effect. The groups did not differ in task performance or in P3 amplitude. We conclude that comprehending the form-meaning mapping of highly iconic signs is not automatic and requires motivation and attention.