TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of imitating gestures during encoding or during retrieval of novel verbs on children's test performance
AU - de Nooijer, JA (Jacqueline)
AU - van Gog, Tamara
AU - Paas, Fred
AU - Zwaan, Rolf
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Research has shown that observing and imitating gestures can foster word learning and that imitation might be
more beneficial than observation, which is in line with theories of Embodied Cognition. This study investigated
when imitation of gestures is most effective, using a 2 × 2 × 2 × 3 mixed design with between-subjects factors
Imitation during Encoding (IE; Yes/No) and Imitation during Retrieval (IR; Yes/No), and within-subjects factors
Time of Testing (Immediate/Delayed) and Verb Type (Object manipulation/Locomotion/Abstract). Primary
school children (N = 115) learned 15 novel verbs (five of each type). They were provided with a verbal definition
and a video of the gesture. Depending on assigned condition, they additionally received no imitation instructions,
instructions to imitate the gesture immediately (i.e., during encoding; IE), instructions to imitate (from
memory) during the first posttest (i.e., during retrieval; IR), or both (IE–IR). Based on the literature, all three imitation
conditions could be predicted to be more effective than no imitation. On an immediate and delayed posttest,
only the object-manipulation verbs were differentially affected by instructional method, with IE and IR
being more effective than no imitation on the immediate test; IE–IR and no imitation did not differ significantly.
After a one week delay, only IR was more effective than no imitation, suggesting that imitation during retrieval is
most effective for learning object-manipulation words.
AB - Research has shown that observing and imitating gestures can foster word learning and that imitation might be
more beneficial than observation, which is in line with theories of Embodied Cognition. This study investigated
when imitation of gestures is most effective, using a 2 × 2 × 2 × 3 mixed design with between-subjects factors
Imitation during Encoding (IE; Yes/No) and Imitation during Retrieval (IR; Yes/No), and within-subjects factors
Time of Testing (Immediate/Delayed) and Verb Type (Object manipulation/Locomotion/Abstract). Primary
school children (N = 115) learned 15 novel verbs (five of each type). They were provided with a verbal definition
and a video of the gesture. Depending on assigned condition, they additionally received no imitation instructions,
instructions to imitate the gesture immediately (i.e., during encoding; IE), instructions to imitate (from
memory) during the first posttest (i.e., during retrieval; IR), or both (IE–IR). Based on the literature, all three imitation
conditions could be predicted to be more effective than no imitation. On an immediate and delayed posttest,
only the object-manipulation verbs were differentially affected by instructional method, with IE and IR
being more effective than no imitation on the immediate test; IE–IR and no imitation did not differ significantly.
After a one week delay, only IR was more effective than no imitation, suggesting that imitation during retrieval is
most effective for learning object-manipulation words.
U2 - 10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.05.013
DO - 10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.05.013
M3 - Article
C2 - 23820099
SN - 0001-6918
VL - 144
SP - 173
EP - 179
JO - Acta Psychologica
JF - Acta Psychologica
IS - 1
ER -