Auditory associative word learning in adults: The effects of musical experience and stimulus ordering
•Learner-related property of musical expertise modulates auditory associative word learning.•Musicians present a late positivity (LPC) instead of an N400 to violated pairings.•Stimulus order affects auditory associative word learning in adults.•Spoken-labels preceding auditory-objects enhances word...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Brain and cognition 2024-10, Vol.180, p.106207, Article 106207 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Learner-related property of musical expertise modulates auditory associative word learning.•Musicians present a late positivity (LPC) instead of an N400 to violated pairings.•Stimulus order affects auditory associative word learning in adults.•Spoken-labels preceding auditory-objects enhances word learning (N400, behavioral)
Evidence for sequential associative word learning in the auditory domain has been identified in infants, while adults have shown difficulties. To better understand which factors may facilitate adult auditory associative word learning, we assessed the role of auditory expertise as a learner-related property and stimulus order as a stimulus-related manipulation in the association of auditory objects and novel labels. We tested in the first experiment auditorily-trained musicians versus athletes (high-level control group) and in the second experiment stimulus ordering, contrasting object-label versus label-object presentation. Learning was evaluated from Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) during training and subsequent testing phases using a cluster-based permutation approach, as well as accuracy-judgement responses during test. Results revealed for musicians a late positive component in the ERP during testing, but neither an N400 (400–800 ms) nor behavioral effects were found at test, while athletes did not show any effect of learning. Moreover, the object-label-ordering group only exhibited emerging association effects during training, while the label-object-ordering group showed a trend-level late ERP effect (800–1200 ms) during test as well as above chance accuracy-judgement scores. Thus, our results suggest the learner-related property of auditory expertise and stimulus-related manipulation of stimulus ordering modulate auditory associative word learning in adults. |
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ISSN: | 0278-2626 1090-2147 1090-2147 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bandc.2024.106207 |