| Literature DB >> 25558094 |
Marie-Josée Bisson1, Walter J B van Heuven2, Kathy Conklin2, Richard J Tunney2.
Abstract
Prior research has reported incidental vocabulary acquisition with complete beginners in a foreign language (FL), within 8 exposures to auditory and written FL word forms presented with a picture depicting their meaning. However, important questions remain about whether acquisition occurs with fewer exposures to FL words in a multimodal situation and whether there is a repeated exposure effect. Here we report a study where the number of exposures to FL words in an incidental learning phase varied between 2, 4, 6, and 8 exposures. Following the incidental learning phase, participants completed an explicit learning task where they learned to recognize written translation equivalents of auditory FL word forms, half of which had occurred in the incidental learning phase. The results showed that participants performed better on the words they had previously been exposed to, and that this incidental learning effect occurred from as little as 2 exposures to the multimodal stimuli. In addition, repeated exposure to the stimuli was found to have a larger impact on learning during the first few exposures and decrease thereafter, suggesting that the effects of repeated exposure on vocabulary acquisition are not necessarily constant.Entities:
Keywords: foreign language vocabulary acquisition; frequency effects; incidental learning; multimodality; repeated exposures
Year: 2014 PMID: 25558094 PMCID: PMC4277705 DOI: 10.1111/lang.12085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lang Learn ISSN: 0023-8333
Figure 1Schematic representation of phase 1 and phase 2 of the experiment.
Mean (SE) percentage of correct answers in blocks 1 and 2 of the translation recognition task (phase 2) for both old and new words according to the number of exposures during the incidental learning phase (phase 1)
| Block 1 | Block 2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % correct | % correct | |||
| Number of exposures | Old words | New words (control) | Old words | New words (control) |
| 2 | 61.2 (1.7) | 55.3 (1.5) | 76.9 (1.7) | 72.3 (1.7) |
| 4 | 64.9 (1.6) | 57.7 (1.3) | 74.1 (1.7) | 71.6 (1.6) |
| 6 | 66.4 (1.6) | 59.9 (1.5) | 77.0 (1.4) | 72.2 (1.4) |
| 8 | 68.9 (1.3) | 58.8 (1.4) | 75.9 (1.5) | 69.8 (1.2) |
Note: None of the new words have been presented during the incidental learning phase. However, they were split into number of exposures subsets in order to provide a control comparison for the purpose of the analysis only.
Figure 2Incidental learning effect (difference score between old and new words) in block 1 of the explicit learning phase (phase 2) according to the number of exposures during the incidental learning phase (phase 1). The error bars show the standard error of the means.
Figure 3Normalized incidental learning effect for each number of exposures during the incidental learning phase (incidental learning effect divided by the number of exposures) with error bars showing the standard error of the means.