Environment Context Variability and Incidental Word Learning: A Virtual Reality Study
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28788Date
2022-11-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Previous research has shown that changes in the scenarios in which something is learned
and recalled, respectively, may result in a subpar performance in memory recollection. The current
study aimed to evaluate how changes in the visuo-perceptual environmental learning context impact
incidental vocabulary learning. To this end, a highly immersive virtual reality setting was created,
and participants were required to read eight distinct stories visually presented to them. A novel word
was delivered twice in every paragraph and embedded in each story. Stories could be displayed
either in a high variability condition, where each paragraph was shown in a new environment context
(four different classrooms) or in a low variability condition, where each paragraph was shown in the
same context. The findings obtained across four assessment tasks (free recall, recognition, picture
matching, and sentence completion) demonstrated that significant visuo-perceptual variability did
not bring about any disadvantages in word learning. Thus, perceptual information from a physically
diverse environment could provide a variety of instructional and educational beneficial possibilities
in the absence of a learning disadvantage.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Rocabado, González Alonso, Dunabeitia Landaburu JA. Environment Context Variability and Incidental Word Learning: A Virtual Reality Study. Brain Sciences. 2022;12(11)Metadata
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