Incidental vocabulary learning with subtitles in a new language: Orthographic markedness and number of exposures
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23948Date
2021-02-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The present study is set to explore the way the orthographic distributional properties of
novel written words and the number of exposures to these words affect their incidental learning in terms of recall and recognition. To that end, two experiments were conducted using
videos with captions. These videos included written nonwords (orthographically marked language-specific items) and pseudowords (orthographically unmarked items) as captions
paired to the spoken targets, presented either in isolation (Experiment 1) or within sentences
(Experiment 2). Our results consistently show that items containing legal letter combinations
(i.e., pseudowords) are better recalled and recognized than those with illegal combinations
(i.e., nonwords). Further analysis in the recall task indicate that frequency modulates the
learning of pseudowords and nonwords in a different way. The learning of pseudowords
increases linearly with repetitions, while nonwords are equally learned across frequencies.
These differential effects found in the recall task do not show up in the recognition task.
Although participants took more time to recognize nonwords in the recognition task,
increased exposure to the items similarly modulated reading times and accuracy for nonwords and pseudowords. Additionally, higher accuracy rates were found in Experiment 2,
which underscores the beneficial effect of supportive visual information.
Publisher
Public Library of ScienceCitation
Pérez-Serrano, Nogueroles-López, Dunabeitia Landaburu. Incidental vocabulary learning with subtitles in a new language: Orthographic markedness and number of exposures. PLOS ONE. 2021Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2021 The Author(s)