Literature DB >> 20614356

Lexical quality in the brain: ERP evidence for robust word learning from context.

Gwen A Frishkoff1, Charles A Perfetti, Kevyn Collins-Thompson.   

Abstract

We examined event-related potentials (ERPs) before and after word learning, using training contexts that differed in their level of contextual support for meaning acquisition. Novel words appeared either in contexts that were semantically constraining, providing strong cues to meaning, or in contexts that were weakly constraining, that is, uninformative. After each sentence, participants were shown the word in isolation and were asked to generate a close synonym. Immediately after training, words trained in high-constraint contexts elicited a smaller left temporal negativity (N300(FT7)) compared with words trained in low-constraint contexts, and both types of trained words elicited a stronger medial frontal negativity (N350(Fz)) relative to familiar words. Two days after training the N300(FT7) disappeared and was replaced by a later, left parietal (P600(Pz)) effect. To examine robust learning, we administered a semantic priming test two days after training. Familiar words and words trained in high-constraint contexts elicited strong N400 effects. By contrast, words trained in low-constraint contexts elicited a weak N400 effect, and novel (untrained rare) words elicited no semantic priming. These findings suggest that supportive contexts and the use of an active meaning-generation task may lead to robust word learning. The effects of this training can be observed as changes in an early left frontal component, as well as the classical N400 effect. We discuss implications for theories of "partial" semantic knowledge and for robust word learning and instruction.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20614356      PMCID: PMC2906764          DOI: 10.1080/87565641.2010.480915

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Neuropsychol        ISSN: 1532-6942            Impact factor:   2.253


  36 in total

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10.  The Effect of Number and Presentation Order of High-Constraint Sentences on Second Language Word Learning.

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