Literature DB >> 8820708

Proverb comprehension in youth: the role of concreteness and familiarity.

M A Nippold1, F S Haq.   

Abstract

This study examined factors that were posited to play an important role in the development of proverb comprehension in school-age children and adolescents, namely, the concreteness and the familiarity of the expressions. Normally achieving students enrolled in Grades 5, 8, and 11 (n = 180) were administered a written forced-choice task that contained eight instances of four different types of proverbs: concrete-familiar ("A rolling stone gathers no moss"); concrete-unfamiliar ("A caged bird longs for the clouds"); abstract-familiar ("Two wrongs don't make a right"); and abstract-unfamiliar ("Of idleness comes no goodness"). Performance on the task steadily improved as a function of increasing grade level and, as predicted, the expressions proved to be differentially challenging: Concrete proverbs were easier to understand than abstract proverbs, and familiar proverbs were easier to understand than unfamiliar proverbs. The results concerning concreteness support the "metasemantic" hypothesis, the view that comprehension develops through active analysis of the words contained in proverbs. The results concerning familiarity support the "language experience" hypothesis, the view that comprehension develops through meaningful exposure to proverbs.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8820708     DOI: 10.1044/jshr.3901.166

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Speech Hear Res        ISSN: 0022-4685


  2 in total

1.  More Than Words: Extra-Sylvian Neuroanatomic Networks Support Indirect Speech Act Comprehension and Discourse in Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia.

Authors:  Meghan Healey; Erica Howard; Molly Ungrady; Christopher A Olm; Naomi Nevler; David J Irwin; Murray Grossman
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2021-01-14       Impact factor: 3.169

2.  Neural correlates of Korean proverb processing: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study.

Authors:  You Gyoung Yi; Dae Yul Kim; Woo Hyun Shim; Joo Young Oh; Sung Hyun Kim; Ho Sung Kim
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 2.708

  2 in total

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