The impact of relevant environmental sounds on foreign language word learning
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
Bilingualism Vocabulary learning Adult foreign language acquisition
Fecha
2025-08-19Referencia bibliográfica
Bellegarda M, García-Gámez AB, Macizo P. The impact of relevant environmental sounds on foreign language word learning. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition. Published online 2025:1-11. doi:10.1017/S1366728925100394
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (FPU19/04616; PID2019-111359GB-I00); University of Granada / CBUA (Open access)Resumen
Past research suggests that novel word learning is facilitated by multimodal contexts, which
enrich semantic representations and strengthen memory traces. We explored whether environmental sounds (e.g., a creaking door) facilitate foreign language (FL) word learning. In all,
36 Spanish-speaking natives learned 60 written Spanish–FL word pairs, each accompanied by
one of three sound conditions: a congruent sound matching the word pairs’ denotation, a
meaningless tone or silence. Participants then completed a semantic priming and lexical decision
task where reaction times and accuracy were collected. Performance was similar for congruent
sound and tone conditions and, compared to silence, showed lower accuracy in the lexical
decision task and a marginal benefit in the semantic task. These findings suggest that environmental sounds can influence learning, with varying effects depending on the task. Results are
discussed in terms of current language learning models.





