Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-Olds

Previous research has shown that sound symbolism facilitates action label learning when the test trial used to assess learning immediately followed the training trial in which the (novel) verb was taught. The current study investigated whether sound symbolism benefits verb learning in the long term....

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Main Authors: Katerina Kantartzis, Mutsumi Imai, Danielle Evans, Sotaro Kita
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-03-01
Series:Languages
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/4/2/21
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spelling doaj-0de63d0720ea4d9fb2ed076bf3572c6f2020-11-24T20:54:53ZengMDPI AGLanguages2226-471X2019-03-01422110.3390/languages4020021languages4020021Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-OldsKaterina Kantartzis0Mutsumi Imai1Danielle Evans2Sotaro Kita3School of Natural and Social Sciences, University of Gloucestershire, Gloucestershire GL50 4AZ, UKFaculty of Information and Environment Sciences, Keio University, Tokyo 252-0882, JapanSchool of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UKDepartment of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UKPrevious research has shown that sound symbolism facilitates action label learning when the test trial used to assess learning immediately followed the training trial in which the (novel) verb was taught. The current study investigated whether sound symbolism benefits verb learning in the long term. Forty-nine children were taught either sound-symbolically matching or mismatching pairs made up of a novel verb and an action video. The following day, the children were asked whether a verb can be used for a scene shown in a video. They were tested with four videos for each word they had been taught. The four videos differed as to whether they contained the same or different actions and actors as in the training video: (1) same-action, same-actor; (2) same-action, different-actor; (3) different-action, same-actor; and (4) different-action, different-actor. The results showed that sound symbolism significantly improved the childrens’ ability to encode the semantic representation of the novel verb and correctly generalise it to a new event the following day. A control experiment ruled out the possibility that children were generalising to the “same-action, different-actor„ video because they did not recognize the actor change due to the memory decay. Nineteen children were presented with the stimulus videos that had also been shown to children in the sound symbolic match condition in Experiment 1, but this time the videos were not labeled. In the test session the following day, the experimenter tested the children’s recognition memory for the videos. The results indicated that the children could detect the actor change from the original training video a day later. The results of the main experiment and the control experiment support the idea that a motivated (iconic) link between form and meaning facilitates the symbolic development in children. The current study, along with recent related studies, provided further evidence for an iconic advantage in symbol development in the domain of verb learning. A motivated form-meaning relationship can help children learn new words and store them long term in the mental lexicon.https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/4/2/21sound symbolismverbsmemoryiconicity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katerina Kantartzis
Mutsumi Imai
Danielle Evans
Sotaro Kita
spellingShingle Katerina Kantartzis
Mutsumi Imai
Danielle Evans
Sotaro Kita
Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-Olds
Languages
sound symbolism
verbs
memory
iconicity
author_facet Katerina Kantartzis
Mutsumi Imai
Danielle Evans
Sotaro Kita
author_sort Katerina Kantartzis
title Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-Olds
title_short Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-Olds
title_full Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-Olds
title_fullStr Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-Olds
title_full_unstemmed Sound Symbolism Facilitates Long-Term Retention of the Semantic Representation of Novel Verbs in Three-Year-Olds
title_sort sound symbolism facilitates long-term retention of the semantic representation of novel verbs in three-year-olds
publisher MDPI AG
series Languages
issn 2226-471X
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Previous research has shown that sound symbolism facilitates action label learning when the test trial used to assess learning immediately followed the training trial in which the (novel) verb was taught. The current study investigated whether sound symbolism benefits verb learning in the long term. Forty-nine children were taught either sound-symbolically matching or mismatching pairs made up of a novel verb and an action video. The following day, the children were asked whether a verb can be used for a scene shown in a video. They were tested with four videos for each word they had been taught. The four videos differed as to whether they contained the same or different actions and actors as in the training video: (1) same-action, same-actor; (2) same-action, different-actor; (3) different-action, same-actor; and (4) different-action, different-actor. The results showed that sound symbolism significantly improved the childrens’ ability to encode the semantic representation of the novel verb and correctly generalise it to a new event the following day. A control experiment ruled out the possibility that children were generalising to the “same-action, different-actor„ video because they did not recognize the actor change due to the memory decay. Nineteen children were presented with the stimulus videos that had also been shown to children in the sound symbolic match condition in Experiment 1, but this time the videos were not labeled. In the test session the following day, the experimenter tested the children’s recognition memory for the videos. The results indicated that the children could detect the actor change from the original training video a day later. The results of the main experiment and the control experiment support the idea that a motivated (iconic) link between form and meaning facilitates the symbolic development in children. The current study, along with recent related studies, provided further evidence for an iconic advantage in symbol development in the domain of verb learning. A motivated form-meaning relationship can help children learn new words and store them long term in the mental lexicon.
topic sound symbolism
verbs
memory
iconicity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/4/2/21
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