Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors

碩士 === 國立臺灣大學 === 語言學研究所 === 104 === Whether aging affects comprehension of metaphors has not been systematically investigated. This study assessed event-related potentials (ERPs) from 24 healthy older adults while they read literal, familiar metaphorical, and unfamiliar metaphorical usages of sente...

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Main Authors: Yi-Ting Tsai, 蔡宜庭
Other Authors: Chia-Lin Lee
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/33935908082196066417
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spelling ndltd-TW-104NTU054620052017-05-20T04:30:08Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/33935908082196066417 Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors 老化對處理非熟悉隱喻的影響 Yi-Ting Tsai 蔡宜庭 碩士 國立臺灣大學 語言學研究所 104 Whether aging affects comprehension of metaphors has not been systematically investigated. This study assessed event-related potentials (ERPs) from 24 healthy older adults while they read literal, familiar metaphorical, and unfamiliar metaphorical usages of sentence-final action verbs, and judged, 800ms post verb onset, if a probe that was either literally related or unrelated to the verb was related to the sentential message. Unlike younger adults in the literature that showed a larger N400 response followed by a late positive component (LPC) to unfamiliar metaphors relative to the literal condition, older adults as a group showed a negativity to unfamiliar metaphors only in a later and more restricted time window (450-550ms) and no LPC effect. Further analysis suggested that individual variations of older adults’ brain responses could be accounted for by their verbal fluency scores. Older adults with higher verbal fluency elicited a sustained negativity to unfamiliar metaphors relative to the literal condition (450-750ms). However, older adults with lower verbal fluency scores did not show any reliable effects in their brain responses. Despite these differences in online measures, older adults in general were quite accurate (99.05% in familiar metaphors and 94.32% in unfamiliar metaphors) in a subsequent offline metaphor-paraphrasing task, indicating that, given time, older adults could successfully obtain the figurative readings for metaphors. These results suggest that metaphor familiarity modulates older adults’ online processing of metaphors in that age-related differences are mainly significant in unfamiliar metaphors. Older adults in general elicit smaller and later N400 effect and no LPC relative to younger adults in literature. In addition, individual cognitive differences affect older adults’ online processing of metaphors, with high-functioning older adults elicit a prolonged negativity in unfamiliar metaphors, suggesting higher functioning older adults are better able to recruit additional cognitive-neural resources to aid unfamiliar metaphor interpretations. Chia-Lin Lee 李佳霖 2016 學位論文 ; thesis 70 en_US
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description 碩士 === 國立臺灣大學 === 語言學研究所 === 104 === Whether aging affects comprehension of metaphors has not been systematically investigated. This study assessed event-related potentials (ERPs) from 24 healthy older adults while they read literal, familiar metaphorical, and unfamiliar metaphorical usages of sentence-final action verbs, and judged, 800ms post verb onset, if a probe that was either literally related or unrelated to the verb was related to the sentential message. Unlike younger adults in the literature that showed a larger N400 response followed by a late positive component (LPC) to unfamiliar metaphors relative to the literal condition, older adults as a group showed a negativity to unfamiliar metaphors only in a later and more restricted time window (450-550ms) and no LPC effect. Further analysis suggested that individual variations of older adults’ brain responses could be accounted for by their verbal fluency scores. Older adults with higher verbal fluency elicited a sustained negativity to unfamiliar metaphors relative to the literal condition (450-750ms). However, older adults with lower verbal fluency scores did not show any reliable effects in their brain responses. Despite these differences in online measures, older adults in general were quite accurate (99.05% in familiar metaphors and 94.32% in unfamiliar metaphors) in a subsequent offline metaphor-paraphrasing task, indicating that, given time, older adults could successfully obtain the figurative readings for metaphors. These results suggest that metaphor familiarity modulates older adults’ online processing of metaphors in that age-related differences are mainly significant in unfamiliar metaphors. Older adults in general elicit smaller and later N400 effect and no LPC relative to younger adults in literature. In addition, individual cognitive differences affect older adults’ online processing of metaphors, with high-functioning older adults elicit a prolonged negativity in unfamiliar metaphors, suggesting higher functioning older adults are better able to recruit additional cognitive-neural resources to aid unfamiliar metaphor interpretations.
author2 Chia-Lin Lee
author_facet Chia-Lin Lee
Yi-Ting Tsai
蔡宜庭
author Yi-Ting Tsai
蔡宜庭
spellingShingle Yi-Ting Tsai
蔡宜庭
Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors
author_sort Yi-Ting Tsai
title Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors
title_short Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors
title_full Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors
title_fullStr Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors
title_full_unstemmed Age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors
title_sort age-related differences in comprehending unfamiliar metaphors
publishDate 2016
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/33935908082196066417
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