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Investigating Effects of Working Memory Training on Foreign Language Development

発表形態:
原著論文
主要業績:
主要業績
単著・共著:
単著
発表年月:
2019年08月
DOI:
10.1111/modl.12584
会議属性:
国際会議(国内開催を含む)
査読:
有り
リンク情報:

日本語フィールド

著者:
Yuko Hayashi
題名:
Investigating Effects of Working Memory Training on Foreign Language Development
発表情報:
The Modern Language Journal 巻: 103 号: 3 ページ: 665-685
キーワード:
working memory; working memory training; Cogmed; English as a foreign language (EFL); second language acquisition
概要:
抄録:
The current 2-part study investigated the relative contributions of English language training (ELT) and computerized Cogmed working memory training (WMT) to improvements in English-as-a-foreign language (EFL) proficiency and working memory capacity. In Study 1, Japanese undergraduate EFL learners were randomly allocated to 1 of 3 experimental groups (ELT only, WMT only, and both WMT and ELT) and a control group. The dual intervention (WMT + ELT) group, who received 5 weeks of both WMT and ELT, retained the training effects on verbal short-term memory and working memory at 6 months post-training. No significant gains were made, however, in a standardized EFL test of vocabulary, grammar, reading, and listening comprehension abilities. Addressing the absence of a measure of more productive skills in Study 1, Study 2 was carried out on a new cohort of Japanese undergraduate EFL learners comprising a WMT group and a control group. No significant far-transfer effects (on the language-based measures) were identified. Descriptive and correlational analyses revealed that the higher general oral proficiency scores tended to be associated with larger improvements in a verbal working memory task (involving storage and manipulation of letter sequences) completed during the Cogmed WMT program. These analyses indicate the possibility of more specialized WMT programs translating into more tangible gains in second or foreign language performance. Further insights into the limited far-transfer effects of WMT could be gleaned by exploring a modular approach to studying working memory.

英語フィールド

Author:
Yuko Hayashi
Title:
Investigating Effects of Working Memory Training on Foreign Language Development
Announcement information:
The Modern Language Journal Vol: 103 Issue: 3 Page: 665-685
Keyword:
working memory; working memory training; Cogmed; English as a foreign language (EFL); second language acquisition
An abstract:
The current 2-part study investigated the relative contributions of English language training (ELT) and computerized Cogmed working memory training (WMT) to improvements in English-as-a-foreign language (EFL) proficiency and working memory capacity. In Study 1, Japanese undergraduate EFL learners were randomly allocated to 1 of 3 experimental groups (ELT only, WMT only, and both WMT and ELT) and a control group. The dual intervention (WMT + ELT) group, who received 5 weeks of both WMT and ELT, retained the training effects on verbal short-term memory and working memory at 6 months post-training. No significant gains were made, however, in a standardized EFL test of vocabulary, grammar, reading, and listening comprehension abilities. Addressing the absence of a measure of more productive skills in Study 1, Study 2 was carried out on a new cohort of Japanese undergraduate EFL learners comprising a WMT group and a control group. No significant far-transfer effects (on the language-based measures) were identified. Descriptive and correlational analyses revealed that the higher general oral proficiency scores tended to be associated with larger improvements in a verbal working memory task (involving storage and manipulation of letter sequences) completed during the Cogmed WMT program. These analyses indicate the possibility of more specialized WMT programs translating into more tangible gains in second or foreign language performance. Further insights into the limited far-transfer effects of WMT could be gleaned by exploring a modular approach to studying working memory.


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