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Gaming experience affects the interpretation of ambiguous words
by
Kaschak, Michael P.
, Eligio, Rachel B.
in
Adolescent
/ Baseball
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Computer & video games
/ Demographic aspects
/ Experiments
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Knowledge
/ Language
/ Language acquisition
/ Male
/ Rowers
/ Rowing
/ Semantics
/ Social Sciences
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Terminology
/ Video Games - psychology
/ Vocabulary
/ Word Association Tests
/ Word processing
/ Young Adult
2020
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Gaming experience affects the interpretation of ambiguous words
by
Kaschak, Michael P.
, Eligio, Rachel B.
in
Adolescent
/ Baseball
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Computer & video games
/ Demographic aspects
/ Experiments
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Knowledge
/ Language
/ Language acquisition
/ Male
/ Rowers
/ Rowing
/ Semantics
/ Social Sciences
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Terminology
/ Video Games - psychology
/ Vocabulary
/ Word Association Tests
/ Word processing
/ Young Adult
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Gaming experience affects the interpretation of ambiguous words
by
Kaschak, Michael P.
, Eligio, Rachel B.
in
Adolescent
/ Baseball
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Computer & video games
/ Demographic aspects
/ Experiments
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Knowledge
/ Language
/ Language acquisition
/ Male
/ Rowers
/ Rowing
/ Semantics
/ Social Sciences
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Terminology
/ Video Games - psychology
/ Vocabulary
/ Word Association Tests
/ Word processing
/ Young Adult
2020
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Gaming experience affects the interpretation of ambiguous words
Journal Article
Gaming experience affects the interpretation of ambiguous words
2020
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Overview
Rodd et al. (2016) report that recreational rowers’ acquisition of sport-related terminology affected their interpretation of words that have both rowing-related and non-rowing-related meanings (e.g., crab ). The extent to which the rowing- and non-rowing-related meanings were accessible to the participants depended on experiential factors, such as how long the participant had been a rower, and how long it had been since they last rowed. We present two experiments that attempt to replicate these findings with another group of hobbyists, namely video game players. Experiment 1 examined the differences in word meaning choice between gamers and non-gamers. Participation in video-gaming lead to participants generating more gaming-related word meanings in a word association task. Experiment 2 further examined the effects of video gaming experience on the lexical representation of gaming-related words. Participants who had spent more years as gamers were more likely to produce gaming-related word meanings in a word association task. The effect of time spent gaming was no longer significant when we took into account whether the participant engaged with video-game related media (such as YouTube channels or gaming-related message boards). This finding helps us to refine our understanding of the results reported by Rodd et al. (2016), suggesting that it may not be the time spent in an activity that affects the interpretation of ambiguous words, but rather the specific exposure to activity-related vocabulary.
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