2014
DOI: 10.1353/hpn.2014.0106
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Is a Picture Worth a Thousand Words? Using Images to Create a Concreteness Effect for Abstract Words: Evidence from Beginning L2 Learners of Spanish

Abstract: This study examines the lexical representation and recall of abstract words by beginning L2 learners of Spanish in the light of the predictions of the dual coding theory (Paivio 1971; Paivio and Desrochers 1980). Ninety-seven learners (forty-four males and fifty-three females) were randomly placed in the picture or non-picture group and taught twelve concrete and twelve abstract words they did not previously know. Subjects performed a recall task on an immediate and a delayed posttest. The results showed that … Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…Such negative effects are likely when images do not match the provided verbal information (Rop et al, 2016), but could also occur if images are irrelevant or distracting to learners, acting as a seductive detail (e.g., Harp & Mayer, 1998;Kalyuga & Sweller, 2014). However, overall, prior research suggests that adding relevant images during encoding of new vocabulary has small but positive effects, especially for abstract words (Farley et al, 2012(Farley et al, , 2014Shen, 2003).…”
Section: Potential Positive Effects Of Images: Efficient Processing O...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Such negative effects are likely when images do not match the provided verbal information (Rop et al, 2016), but could also occur if images are irrelevant or distracting to learners, acting as a seductive detail (e.g., Harp & Mayer, 1998;Kalyuga & Sweller, 2014). However, overall, prior research suggests that adding relevant images during encoding of new vocabulary has small but positive effects, especially for abstract words (Farley et al, 2012(Farley et al, , 2014Shen, 2003).…”
Section: Potential Positive Effects Of Images: Efficient Processing O...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In three classroom experiments, of which the first two were carried out in parallel, Dutch secondary education students practiced foreign vocabulary through retrieval practice with or without images (see Figure 1). Different vocabulary materials were used in each experiment because images might affect the retention of concrete words differently from more abstract idioms and words (Farley et al, 2012(Farley et al, , 2014Shen, 2003), and because images might affect retention differently depending on the degree to which retrieval effort is reduced (cf. retrievaleffort theories, Pyc & Rawson, 2009;Rowland, 2014).…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%