You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults

Although cognition and memory has been shown to decline with age, age-related disparities in performance may be mediated by group-appropriate learning methods. As such, understanding how words are learnt by older adults can be useful for developing language learning techniques for the aged populatio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tan, Justina Yu Han
Other Authors: Alice Hiu Dan Chan
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76554
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author Tan, Justina Yu Han
author2 Alice Hiu Dan Chan
author_facet Alice Hiu Dan Chan
Tan, Justina Yu Han
author_sort Tan, Justina Yu Han
collection NTU
description Although cognition and memory has been shown to decline with age, age-related disparities in performance may be mediated by group-appropriate learning methods. As such, understanding how words are learnt by older adults can be useful for developing language learning techniques for the aged population. A way to look at how novel words are learnt is through the use of face names, which have shown a familiarity advantage. This study compares word learning in bilingual Singaporean older adults and younger adults, investigating the role of referent familiarity in a name-learning task with pseudo words. A familiarization task was also introduced to facilitate recognition of an unknown face. Accuracy rates in 4 different conditions: (a) known-familiarized faces, (b) known-unfamiliarized faces, (c) unknown-familiarized faces, (d) unknown-unfamiliarized faces were compared and significant main effects of referent type, familiarization and age were found. A significant interaction was also found between age and familiarization. Interestingly, known faces were learnt better than unknown faces, but familiarized faces were learnt worse than unfamiliarized faces. However, while younger adults were negatively affected by the familiarization task, older adults seemed to benefit from the additional exposure. The findings suggest that age differences in word learning may require specialized learning methods to meet different needs.
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spelling ntu-10356/765542019-12-10T13:32:44Z You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults Tan, Justina Yu Han Alice Hiu Dan Chan School of Humanities DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics::Language acquisition Although cognition and memory has been shown to decline with age, age-related disparities in performance may be mediated by group-appropriate learning methods. As such, understanding how words are learnt by older adults can be useful for developing language learning techniques for the aged population. A way to look at how novel words are learnt is through the use of face names, which have shown a familiarity advantage. This study compares word learning in bilingual Singaporean older adults and younger adults, investigating the role of referent familiarity in a name-learning task with pseudo words. A familiarization task was also introduced to facilitate recognition of an unknown face. Accuracy rates in 4 different conditions: (a) known-familiarized faces, (b) known-unfamiliarized faces, (c) unknown-familiarized faces, (d) unknown-unfamiliarized faces were compared and significant main effects of referent type, familiarization and age were found. A significant interaction was also found between age and familiarization. Interestingly, known faces were learnt better than unknown faces, but familiarized faces were learnt worse than unfamiliarized faces. However, while younger adults were negatively affected by the familiarization task, older adults seemed to benefit from the additional exposure. The findings suggest that age differences in word learning may require specialized learning methods to meet different needs. Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics and Multilingual Studies 2019-03-26T06:08:41Z 2019-03-26T06:08:41Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76554 en Nanyang Technological University 35 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics::Language acquisition
Tan, Justina Yu Han
You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults
title You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults
title_full You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults
title_fullStr You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults
title_full_unstemmed You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults
title_short You look familiar … but what’s your name? Word learning in Singaporean older adults
title_sort you look familiar but what s your name word learning in singaporean older adults
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics::Language acquisition
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76554
work_keys_str_mv AT tanjustinayuhan youlookfamiliarbutwhatsyournamewordlearninginsingaporeanolderadults