University of Wollongong
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White noise facilitates new-word learning from context

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 02:33 authored by Anthony Angwin, Wayne Wilson, Pablo Ripolles, Antoni Rodriguez-Fornells, Wendy Arnott, Robert BarryRobert Barry, Bonnie Cheng, Kimberley Garden, David Copland
Listening to white noise may facilitate cognitive performance, including new word learning, for some individuals. This study investigated whether auditory white noise facilitates the learning of novel written words from context in healthy young adults. Sixty-nine participants were required to determine the meaning of novel words placed within sentence contexts during a silent reading task. Learning was performed either with or without white noise, and recognition of novel word meanings was tested immediately after learning and after a short delay. Immediate recognition accuracy for learned novel word meanings was higher in the noise group relative to the no noise group, however this effect was no longer evident at the delayed recognition test. These findings suggest that white noise has the capacity to facilitate meaning acquisition from context, however further research is needed to clarify its capacity to improve longer-term retention of meaning.

Funding

The flipside of noise: Does it benefit listening and learning? People with low attention capacity can experience improvements in cognitive function (eg memory) in the presence of external white noise

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Angwin, A. J., Wilson, W. J., Ripolles, P., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., Arnott, W. L., Barry, R. J., Cheng, B. B. Y., Garden, K. & Copland, D. A. (2019). White noise facilitates new-word learning from context. Brain and Language, 199 104699-1-104699-6.

Journal title

Brain and Language

Volume

199

Language

English

RIS ID

139153

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