ana pellicer-sánchez university of nottingham

28
Using psycholinguistic measures to research vocabulary: Evidence from reaction time (RT) and eye-tracking Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University of Nottingham Theory and Practice in Vocabulary Learning and Teaching University of Reading 20th January 2012

Upload: alijah

Post on 23-Feb-2016

52 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Using psycholinguistic measures to research vocabulary : Evidence from reaction time (RT) and eye -tracking. Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University of Nottingham. Theory and Practice in Vocabulary Learning and Teaching University of Reading 20th January 2012. Key issues. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Using psycholinguistic measures to research vocabulary: Evidence

from reaction time (RT) and eye-tracking

Ana Pellicer-SánchezUniversity of Nottingham

Theory and Practice in Vocabulary Learning and TeachingUniversity of Reading

20th January 2012

Page 2: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Key issues

•Importance of vocabulary knowledge

•Need to master high number of words

•What do we need to know about words?

Multiple Aspects of Vocabulary

Knowledge

Page 3: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Aspects of Lexical Knowledge

USE

MEANING

FORMwrittenspokenword parts

form & meaningconcept & referents

grammatical functionscollocationsregister/frequency

associations

Fluency & Automaticity

(Nation, 2001)

Page 4: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Aspects of Lexical Knowledge Continuum of mastery

No knowledge Complete Mastery

Automaticity

Very slow

Very fast

Page 5: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Study 1 and Study 2

“Acquisition of automaticity and speed of lexical access in the language

classroom”

Page 6: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Studies 1 & 2- Aims•Can automaticity and speed of lexical

access benefit from classroom instruction?

and if so,

• Which teaching approach is more beneficial?

Page 7: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

•Two main teaching and learning approaches:

• Implicit/Incidental learning:“Incidental learning can occur when one is using

language for communicative purposes” (Schmitt, 2000:120).

▫Explicit/Intentional learning: “Explicit learning focuses attention directly on

the information to be learned” (Schmitt, 2000:120).

Studies 1 & 3- Methodology

Page 8: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Studies 1 & 2- Methodology•Participants: 20/21 students of Spanish as a FL •Structure:

Test 1

Test 2

TreatmentWeek 1 Weeks 2 & 3 1 month

later

Page 9: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Studies 1 & 2- Methodology• Tests:- E-Prime software - Yes-no decision- Meaning-form link- RTs recorded- Instructions + Practice session + Test- Target and control words

Page 10: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Studies 1 & 2- Methodology•STUDY 1: - Two sessions - Incidental approach - Exposure through reading for comprehension•STUDY 2: - Two sessions - Explicit/Engaged approach - Exposure through vocabulary activities

Page 11: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Studies 1 & 2- RTs Pre-test

Post-test

jefe jefe

RT1 = 850 ms

RT2 = 780 msTwo measures:

1) Raw RT2) Coefficient of Variation (CV)= M/SD

(Segalowitz & Segalowitz, 1993)

Page 12: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Studies 1 & 2: Main findings•Acquisition of declarative knowledge from both

approaches. •Advantage of the explicit approach. •Automaticity of vocabulary knowledge can be

acquired in the language classroom.

•It might need more explicit, focused exposure.•No significant effect of the number of repetitions

in the acquisition of automaticity and speed of lexical access.

Page 13: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Study 3

“Acquiring automaticity and speed of lexical processing in reading”

Page 14: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

1) What happens when L2 learners encounter new words while reading? How are new words read?

2) How many times do L2 learners need to read a new word before showing a more fluent and automatic reading?

Study 3- Aims

Page 15: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

•Participants: 15 non-natives speakers of English 7 males, 8 females Ages: from 21 to 32 years old (M= 25.5) Variety of L1s: Portuguese, Spanish, Greek, Chinese,

Hindi, Lithuania, Polish, Romanian. PG students Self-rated reading abilities ≥ 8 (10-point scale)

Study 3- Methodology

Page 16: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

•Structure:

Reading Activity + post-reading assessment

•Materials: Reading text:

▫Short story

▫2,298 words

▫High-frequency vocabulary (3k from the

BNC)

Study 3- Methodology

Page 17: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Study 3- Methodology

Nonword Meaning/ Word replaced N Repetitions

1. holter house (1k); shelter (3k) 8

2. berrow bowl (2k) 8

3. bancel criminal/ prisoner (2k) 8

4. cambul ring (1k) 8

5. twoser noise (2k) 8

6. soters clothes (1k) 8

• Target vocabulary:

Page 18: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

• Instruments:▫Eye tracker: Eyelink I▫Calibration (at the beginning and half way through the experiment)▫Practice session▫Experimental session (25 screens)▫Comprehension Questions▫Post-tests ▫Less than 1 hour

Study 3- Apparatus and Procedure

Page 19: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham
Page 20: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Part 1-Form recognition test:

Study 3-Instruments

Uncerta

ina) ackol b) acklon c) hacklon d) hackol 1 2 3 4

1. a) hotler b) holter c) houter d) houler 1 2 3 4

2. a) twoser b) twonse c) twiser d) twines 1 2 3 4

Example:

Page 21: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Part 2-Meaning Recall test: InterviewsPart 3-Meaning Recognition test:

1) holter   a) basement b) workhouse 1 2 3 4 c) prison d) food hall e) I don’t know. 

2) cambul a) picture b) plate 1 2 3 4 c) window d) ring e) I don’t know   

Study 3-Instruments

Part 4-Reading strategies Interviews

Page 22: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

1) First fixation duration = 32) First pass reading time = 3 + 43) Fixation count= 3 fixations4) Total reading time = 3+4+6

Study 3-Eye-tracking measures

1 2 3 4

56

7 8 9 10 11

Page 23: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Study 3- Declarative knowledge (Preliminary results)

**

Form recognition Meaning recall Meaning recognition0

1

2

3

4

5

6

5.4(90%)

3.8(63%)

5(83%)

Series1

**** p< .001

Page 24: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Rep 1 Rep 2 Rep 3 Rep 4 Rep 5 Rep 6 Rep 7 Rep 80

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

First Fixation Dur-ationFirst Pass Reading TimeTotal Reading Time

**p ≤ .001

**

Study 3- Eye-movements (Preliminary results)

**

Page 25: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Study 3- Results (Preliminary results)

Rep 1 Rep 2 Rep 3 Rep 4 Rep 5 Rep 6 Rep 7 Rep 80

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

N Fixati...

**

**p ≤ .001

Page 26: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

Study 3- Conclusion•Effectiveness of reading for incidental acquisition

of multiple components of vocabulary knowledge.

•Acquisition of fluency of reading: Significant effect of the N of repetitions for

unknown words (not for controls) 3-5 repetitions.

Similarity to known words by 8 repetitions.

Page 27: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

General conclusion•Studies 1 & 2:

- Automaticity and speed of lexical access can benefit from classroom instruction.

- It might take more explicit exposure- No effect of frequency of exposure.

•Study 3:- Automaticity, fluency, and speed of learners’

reading of new vocabulary can be acquired incidentally from repeated exposure.

- Significant effect after 3-5 repetitions. •Measures of RT and eye-tracking are effective means of

measuring vocabulary acquisition.

Page 28: Ana Pellicer-Sánchez University  of  Nottingham

References• Nation, I. S. P. (2001). Learning vocabulary in another

language. Cambridge: University Press. • Schmitt, N. (2000). Vocabulary in language teaching.

Cambridge: University Press. • Segalowitz, N., & Segalowitz, S. (1993). Skilled

performance, practice, and the differentiation of speed-up from automatization effects: Evidence from second language word recognition. Applied Psycholinguistics, 14 (3), 369-385.

• Pellicer-Sánchez, A. & Schmitt, N. (2010). Incidental Vocabulary Acquisition from an Authentic Novel: Do things fall apart? Reading in a Foreign Language, 22(1), 31-55.

• Webb, S. (2007). The effects of repetition on vocabulary knowledge. Applied Linguistics, 28,46–65.