Content area
In contextual vocabulary acquisition, second language learners address both morphological and contextual cues to infer the meanings of novel words. The study investigated cognitive strategies and their eye movement correlates in contextual vocabulary inferencing task. A sample of 30 healthy participants with normal or corrected to normal vision read an Intermediate-level text in English, aiming to define the meaning of 10 low-frequency words embedded in the text. Based on both unstructured and structured post-hoc reports, we attributed the inferencing process either to word-level processing, context-level processing, or discourse-level processing strategy. Eye movements were recorded on the target word and on the target word clause areas of interest. Inferencing success was associated with increased first fixation duration on the target word both for word- and context-level processing strategy, and increased dwell time on the target word clause for context-level processing strategy. Our findings emphasize the role of both morphological and contextual processing in vocabulary inferencing task.
Details
Second language vocabulary learning;
Language acquisition;
Memory;
English as a second language learning;
Clauses;
Word frequency;
Discourse strategies;
Keywords;
Language thought relationship;
Eye movements;
Second language learning;
Educational objectives;
Knowledge;
Reading comprehension;
Context;
Morphological processing;
Word meaning;
Morphology;
Meaning;
Cognition;
Cues;
Vocabulary;
Strategies;
Novel words;
Fixation;
Cognitive strategies;
Tracking;
Eye tracking
; Blinnikova, Irina 2 1 Centre for Socio-Cognitive Discourse Studies, Moscow State Linguistic University, Moscow 119034, Russia
2 Centre for Socio-Cognitive Discourse Studies, Moscow State Linguistic University, Moscow 119034, Russia; Department of Occupational Psychology and Engineering Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow 119991, Russia;