Basic mechanisms of language's effect on attention and learning
语言影响注意力和学习的基本机制
基本信息
- 批准号:7992454
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 21.06万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2008
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2008-12-01 至 2013-11-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AdultAnimalsApplications GrantsAssociation LearningAttentionAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderCategoriesChildChild DevelopmentChild LanguageCognitionCognitiveCuesData SetDevelopmentDevelopmental Delay DisordersEnglish LanguageEventFutureGrantHealthHumanIndividualInterventionInvestigationJapanese PopulationKnowledgeLanguageLanguage DelaysLanguage DevelopmentLeadLearningMathematicsMethodsProblem SolvingProcessPropertyResearchShapesSourceSystemTherapeutic procedureTrainingWorkautism spectrum disorderclassical conditioningcognitive systemdevelopmental diseaseganginterestnonhuman primateremediationresearch studyskillstheories
项目摘要
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): What we attend to at any moment determines what we learn at that moment, and this also depends on our past learning. This grant investigates how words, perceptual cues, and category organizations form a system of associations that contextually cue attention, making it exquisitely tuned to context and thus constraining and propelling future learning. Although old views characterized associative learning as simple counting of individual pairings, more advanced theories suggest that people learn systems of overlapping associations that (1) lead to systematic effects on attention, (2) tune learning to the context, and (3) give rise to higher-order (almost rule-like) correlations. This grant seeks a mechanistic understanding of these processes in word learning context. Twenty- four to 48-months-old children will participate in the experiments containing artificial language learning, training tasks, and the comparison of children learning two different languages (English and Japanese), with different systems of correlations. Understanding the basic processes through which context guides attention and how and why language might be a particularly potent cue to attention is a first step toward understanding the cascading consequences of language delay on cognitive development and the invention of new methods for tuning attention when language is not easily available to the learner. PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE: What we attend to at any moment determines what we learn at that moment. What we attend to is also dependent on what we have learned in the past. Thus, learning --and development -- builds on itself. Attentional learning thus provides one example of how developmental delays in a basic process might create snowballing detrimental consequences. Understanding basic mechanisms of attentional learning should also provide us with principled reasons for developing new intervention and therapeutic procedures. Attention (and attentional learning) has been implicated in developmental disorders including pervasive developmental delay, autism spectrum disorders, ADHD, among others. This grant proposes to examine attentional learning in the context of language learning, in typically developing children, but its findings broader implications for attentional learning more generally and also developmental delays in language learning.
描述(由申请人提供):我们在任何时候注意到什么决定了我们在那一刻学到什么,这也取决于我们过去的学习。这项研究旨在研究单词,感知线索和类别组织如何形成一个关联系统,该系统根据上下文提示注意力,使其与上下文精确协调,从而限制和推动未来的学习。虽然旧的观点认为联想学习是对个体配对的简单计数,但更先进的理论认为,人们学习的是重叠联想系统,这些系统(1)导致对注意力的系统性影响,(2)根据上下文调整学习,(3)产生高阶(几乎是规则般的)相关性。这个补助金寻求在单词学习背景下对这些过程的机械理解。24至48个月大的儿童将参与包含人工语言学习、训练任务以及儿童学习两种不同语言(英语和日语)的比较的实验,具有不同的相关系统。理解语境引导注意力的基本过程,以及语言如何以及为什么可能是一个特别有效的注意力线索,是理解语言延迟对认知发展的级联后果的第一步,也是在语言不容易为学习者所用的情况下发明调整注意力的新方法的第一步。公共卫生相关性:我们在任何时候关注的内容决定了我们在那一刻学到的内容。我们所关注的也取决于我们过去学到的东西。因此,学习-和发展-是建立在自身之上的。因此,注意力学习提供了一个例子,说明一个基本过程中的发育迟缓如何造成滚雪球般的有害后果。理解注意学习的基本机制也应该为我们开发新的干预和治疗程序提供原则性的理由。注意力(和注意力学习)与发育障碍有关,包括广泛性发育迟缓、自闭症谱系障碍、ADHD等。这项拨款建议在语言学习的背景下,在典型的发展中儿童,检查注意力学习,但其研究结果更广泛的注意力学习的影响,更普遍的,也在语言学习的发展迟缓。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
数据更新时间:{{ journalArticles.updateTime }}
{{
item.title }}
{{ item.translation_title }}
- DOI:
{{ item.doi }} - 发表时间:
{{ item.publish_year }} - 期刊:
- 影响因子:{{ item.factor }}
- 作者:
{{ item.authors }} - 通讯作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ journalArticles.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ monograph.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ sciAawards.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ conferencePapers.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ patent.updateTime }}
Hanako Yoshida其他文献
Hanako Yoshida的其他文献
{{
item.title }}
{{ item.translation_title }}
- DOI:
{{ item.doi }} - 发表时间:
{{ item.publish_year }} - 期刊:
- 影响因子:{{ item.factor }}
- 作者:
{{ item.authors }} - 通讯作者:
{{ item.author }}
{{ truncateString('Hanako Yoshida', 18)}}的其他基金
Exploring Developmental Neural Mechanism of Gaze Behaviors during Parent-Child Play
探索亲子游戏中注视行为的发育神经机制
- 批准号:
10433184 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Exploring Developmental Neural Mechanism of Gaze Behaviors during Parent-Child Play
探索亲子游戏中注视行为的发育神经机制
- 批准号:
10592396 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Basic mechanisms of language's effect on attention and learning
语言影响注意力和学习的基本机制
- 批准号:
7715100 - 财政年份:2008
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Basic mechanisms of language's effect on attention and learning
语言影响注意力和学习的基本机制
- 批准号:
8196874 - 财政年份:2008
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Basic mechanisms of language's effect on attention and learning
语言影响注意力和学习的基本机制
- 批准号:
8392297 - 财政年份:2008
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Basic mechanisms of language's effect on attention and learning
语言影响注意力和学习的基本机制
- 批准号:
7506970 - 财政年份:2008
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
相似海外基金
The earliest exploration of land by animals: from trace fossils to numerical analyses
动物对陆地的最早探索:从痕迹化石到数值分析
- 批准号:
EP/Z000920/1 - 财政年份:2025
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Fellowship
Animals and geopolitics in South Asian borderlands
南亚边境地区的动物和地缘政治
- 批准号:
FT230100276 - 财政年份:2024
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
ARC Future Fellowships
The function of the RNA methylome in animals
RNA甲基化组在动物中的功能
- 批准号:
MR/X024261/1 - 财政年份:2024
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Fellowship
Ecological and phylogenomic insights into infectious diseases in animals
对动物传染病的生态学和系统发育学见解
- 批准号:
DE240100388 - 财政年份:2024
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award
Zootropolis: Multi-species archaeological, ecological and historical approaches to animals in Medieval urban Scotland
Zootropolis:苏格兰中世纪城市动物的多物种考古、生态和历史方法
- 批准号:
2889694 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Studentship
Using novel modelling approaches to investigate the evolution of symmetry in early animals.
使用新颖的建模方法来研究早期动物的对称性进化。
- 批准号:
2842926 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Studentship
Study of human late fetal lung tissue and 3D in vitro organoids to replace and reduce animals in lung developmental research
研究人类晚期胎儿肺组织和 3D 体外类器官在肺发育研究中替代和减少动物
- 批准号:
NC/X001644/1 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Training Grant
RUI: Unilateral Lasing in Underwater Animals
RUI:水下动物的单侧激光攻击
- 批准号:
2337595 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
RUI:OSIB:The effects of high disease risk on uninfected animals
RUI:OSIB:高疾病风险对未感染动物的影响
- 批准号:
2232190 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
A method for identifying taxonomy of plants and animals in metagenomic samples
一种识别宏基因组样本中植物和动物分类的方法
- 批准号:
23K17514 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 21.06万 - 项目类别:
Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Research (Exploratory)