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Abstract Brain science, one of the most advanced subjects in the field of cognitive throughout this century, which was listed in the National Developing and Planning Strategies Research in some developed countries. Such as The Decade of the Brain in the US and The Scientific Era of Brain in Japan, etc.. The author tries to testify different learning methods affect vitally different on the structures and functions in the brain. Getting to know those neuromechanism on acquisition and cognitive disorders provides us more efficient expectation for teaching and learning. This thesis is an experimental research on English vocabulary acquisition based on the theories of cognitive neuroscience and cognitive psychology. The hypothesis is that the multiple memory systems--the semantic memories, the procedural memories, the episodic memories and the emotional memories can help students with the vocabulary acquisition. Meanwhile, some memory strategies were mentioned. With the pre-test questionnaire, the experimental procedure was carried out in the form of drawing mind-mapping by the students themselves, and in the latter part, the reflection journals were collected for more feedback. Mastering more knowledge on cognitive neuroscience, such as the levels of processing, methods of connections among neurons for getting more information stored in the hippocampus, and the factors impact on memory, and so on, the teachers can improve their teaching skills. Key Words: multiple memory systems, strategies on vocabulary acquisition, mind-mapping i 摘 要 脑科学是本世纪认知领域中最活跃的前沿课题之一,世界发达国家已将其研 究纳入国家重点科学发展战略规划,如美国的“脑的十年”计划和日本的“脑科 学时代”计划等。本文试图解决的问题是:不同的学习方式对人脑结构与功能可 塑性的重要作用,深入认识各种学习和认知障碍的神经机制,提供科学的原理与 方法,为学生和教师提高学与教的效率。 本论文是基于认知神经科学和认知心理学的理论对记忆策略和英语单词记 忆的实验研究。实验假设通过多重记忆通路,即:语义记忆,程序性记忆,情景 记忆和情绪记忆,使学生能有效地记忆单词,并提出一些建议性词汇习得策略。 实验过程以学生自主绘制思维导图为例,并结合前期问卷调查及后期反思日志形 式,全面获取学生的反馈信息。教师通过掌握认知神经科学方面的知识,例如大 脑的信息加工过程,如何增加神经元之间的连结,获取储存在负责记忆的海马区 域的信息,影响记忆的因素等,提高教学质量。 关键词:多重记忆通路;词汇习得策略;思维导图 Contents Acknowledgements........................................................................................................i Abstract in English.......................................................................................................ii Abstract in Chinese.....................................................................................................iii Chapter 1 Introduction.............................................................................................1 1.1 The Purpose of the Study.................................................................................1 1.2 Background of Vocabulary Acquisition...........................................................3 1.3 Organization of the Thesis...............................................................................4 Chapter 2 Literature Review....................................................................................6 2.1 Related Theories on Cognitive Neuroscience.................................................6 2.1.1 The Working Procedure of Brain.......................................................6 2.1.2 The Importance of Hippocampus.......................................................9 2.1.3 Evaluation of Short-term Memory and Long-term Memory............10 2.1.4 Schemata..........................................................................................15 2.1.5 Levels of Processing........................................................................18 2.2 Vocabulary Acquisition.................................................................................19 2.2.1 The Previous Studies on Vocabulary Acquisition............................19 2.2.2 The Difference between Acquisition and Learning..........................21 2.2.3 Method for Vocabulary Acquisition: Mind-mapping.......................22 2.3 Memory Strategies ........................................................................................26 2.3.1 Multiple Memory Systems in the Brain...........................................26 2.3.2 Mnemonic Devices...........................................................................30 Chapter 3 The Study of Mind-mapping in Vocabulary Acquisition...................37 3.1 Introduction of Research Background.........................................................37 3.2 The Present Study........................................................................................38 3.2.1 Research Questions..........................................................................38 3.2.2 Subjects............................................................................................38 3.2.3 Methodology....................................................................................39 3.2.4 Experimental Procedure...................................................................41 3.3 Implications for Vocabulary Acquisition.....................................................42 Chapter 4 The Application of Mind-mapping and Discussion............................43 4.1 The Application of Mind-mapping..............................................................43 4.1.1 Graphic Mind-mapping....................................................................43 4.1.2 Grade Mind-mapping.......................................................................44 4.1.3 Chain Mind-mapping.......................................................................45 4.1.4 Free Association Mind-mapping......................................................46 4.2 Discussion...................................................................................................47 4.2.1 The Relation Between Mind-mapping and Memory........................47 4.2.2 Other Factors Impact on Memory....................................................49 Chapter 5 Conclusion.............................................................................................56 5.1 Major Findings............................................................................................56 5.1.1 Implications for Learning.................................................................57 5.1.2 Implications for Teaching.................................................................57 5.2 Limitations..................................................................................................60 References...................................................................................................................62 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 The Purpose of the Study There have been an increasing number of studies on the issues of the long-term memory test and short-term memory test, and vocabulary teaching and learning both at home and abroad since the end of last century. As for the memory test, it derived from Hermann Ebbinghaus, and the concept of association which Ebbinghaus used to explain memory was involved. He verified the intuitions that repetition facilitated memory, and also that memory declined as time went by. Thereafter, researchers in the teaching field began to seek for the methods of vocabulary acquisition. Before Hermann Ebbinghaus’s period, Toth in Egypt, Mnemosyne in Greece and Minerva in Rome were considered goddess of wisdom and memory. It was said that early researchers focused on how to improve the operation of memory. Many years ago, William James claimed that attention was the key to better memory. Assuming that attention were the allocation of processing capacity through rehearsal or semantic elaboration, James’ suggestion had considerable merit for improving memory of recent events. Memory for recent experiences can be quite fragile. We seem to get only a small proportion of this sort of related resources. And those resources were just remembered for a very short period of time. Observations such as those deducted the concept of short-term memory. Later on, some researchers considred it as a system which separates from long-term memory. The distinction between short-term memory and 1 long-term memory systems implicated that different working procedures in the brain differ the results of memory. Therefore, we can conclude that different systems store the different levels of processing of the information even though the precondition is alike. The current view of short-term memory is that it is much like a separate storage system that distincts from long-term memory, and it is more like a series of processes that allocates us to work with information stored in long-term memory. This point of view is based on the concept of working memory and also can be inferred from the neurological evidence. One of the most profound discoveries in the memory field is that it hardly matters how hard we attempt to learn something; what matters is how well we organize and process the information. Bower (1972) clarified this ideas with his experiment. During the test he required every participants to make a mental image for the pairs of words listed on the paper. In one of the group, the participants were asked to use the image to memorize the pairs of words, the process of intending to learn something is called intentional learning. In the other group of the test, the participants were required to merely remember the vivid images, but with no consideration of the pairs of words, and the process of learning something without intention is called incidental learning. The subtle results showed that the participants in the so-called intentional learning group had the same effect of memorizing pairs of the words as the participants which was called the incidental group. Therefore, we can concluded that it is useful for the learners, particularly the language learners to organize an image beforehand when memorizing the new words. In the thesis, the purpose is to dig out the relation between short-term memory and long-term memory, as well as the link which shifts from short-term memory to long-term memory from a neuroscientific perspective, that is to say, the multiple memory systems are important ways of vocabulary acquisition, which include the semantic memories, the procedural memories, the declarative memories, the episodic memories and the emotional memories, so does from a cognitive perspective. 1.2 Background of Vocabulary Acquisition Language consists of three factors: intonation, lexicon, and grammar. There will be no communication without words, also, the extent of vocabulary is the significant standard for a man’s language level. According to the current education system in our country, the English grammar for compulsory education has been conducted. One of the goals for students in university supposed to be the vocabulary enlarging. The standard for vocabulary in CET 4 (College English Test-Level 4) is that student should master 4,200 words, while obviously, a highly educated American masters 50,000~70,000 words, which is far beyond the standard that we expected. Therefore, how to improve the capacity of memorizing for the Chinese students becomes a tough but serious problem. Some believed that English is not innate, only by reciting words after words can they enlarge the vocabulary. However, people seldom realize that they will acquire some knowledge naturally while they are reading and listening the information time and times again. And the evidence showed that the input method like listening had better effect on learning than the method of seeing. Unfortunately, in the current situation, the Chinese students don’t have much opportunity to read broadly, so they have less choices on books, the only connection to the outside world is the textbooks. For one reason, their parent forbid them searching on-line or by other media in case of some negative resources and indulgence on them, and which leads them to the limitation on vocabulary acquisition. For another, the tragic students have albatross as long as they are not access to the university. In China, repeating words mechanically still takes an overriding place. Though this kind of teaching method is criticized by many scholars, teachers are keeping the rails for lacking of certain memory strategies. Methods like mind-mapping, word formation (spelling, derivation, compounding, blending, clipping), contextual reminding, key-word method, etc.. All the methods above were very popular in western countries, but not quite prevailing in China. It sums up, teachers should not merely give the repetition assignment to the students and endless rote learning tasks, but instruct them effectively combining with some learning strategies on vocabulary acquisition, as well as certain mnemonics. 1.3 Organization of the Thesis This thesis is divided into five chapters. Chapter one is the introduction, which provides the purpose of the study, problems in vocabulary acquisition and also the organization of the thesis. Chapter two presents literature review and theoretical framework, including the related theories in cognitive neuroscience, that are, the working procedure of brain, the importance of hippocampus, and evaluation of short-term memory and long-term memory, theories like schemata, levels of processing, as well, vocabulary acquisition, which includes the difference between acquisition and learning, and, methods for vocabulary acquisition. And the writer illustrates the multiple memory systems in the brain, that are, the semantic memories, the procedural memories, the episodic memories, and the emotional memories. Besides, mnemonic devices like methods of loci, the peg words method are discussed. Chapter three introduces the study of mind-mapping. Part one is the introduction, showing the research background; the second part is the procedure of the present study, including research question and hypotheses, the subjects, methodology, and experimental procedure; part three is the data collection. Chapter four provides the application of mind-mapping and discussion. Many samples made by the students are listed and discussions on the application of mind-mapping and its relation between memory. Also, other factors that may impact on memory are mentioned. Chapter five states the limitations of the thesis, future research tendency, and the implications both for language learning and teaching. Chapter 2 Literature Review 2.1 Related Theories on Cognitive Neuroscience In the last two decades, researches on the neural basis of cognitive processes had dramatically increased. As a matter of fact, the pioneers unprecedentedly focused on the relation between mind and brain in the last twenty years than ever we could imagine. Then we would wondering why it was in such a rapid rate though there existed countless factors. The two dominant factors accounting for the success of cognitive neuroscience are the development of sophisticated technologies like functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, abbreviated by fMRI for observing the tiny changes in the brain when it performs certain cognitive tasks, so that we can better explain the working procedure in our brain. And the second contribution in the neural science was the increasingly concrete explanations for neural anatomy. We can not deny the mental process starts with stimuli and response, and later triggers a series of performances in the brain, but we eventually underscore the part that processes and stores the information. In this chapter, the working procedure of brain and the importance of hippocampus, which has tense relation with memory are discussed in details. Meanwhile, the fundamental roles of schemata that play in people’s cognition and recognition, and levels of processing are also mentioned in the study. 2.1.1 The Working Procedure of Brain The brain, a delicate and subtle creature, and also a psychological organ, mainly responsible for our mental processes such as emotions in daily lives, the recognition of surrounded objects, problem solving and reasoning, our perception of the outside world and our awareness of its meaning. A brain without mental process is what fish without water, of course, it can not be called the most sophisticated creature that God gives to us. For better understanding of how does the brain work, the first thing we should figure out is how does the brain react to the outside world, and by which tunnel the brain receives its input and send out its output. As neural scientists illustrated, all the mental activities are involved with the workings of brain cells, or the term called neurons. There are three types of neurons. First type is sensory neurons that in charge of the response from the senses like what we see, what we feel, what we hear, and what we smell; the second type called motor neurons that in charge of sending signals to muscles for body control; the third type of neuron called inter-neurons, which connect the other two types of neurons mentioned above. Before we birth 250,000 neurons are produced per minute. In the procedure of brain development, if some neurons cannot be used appropriately, the connections between them will disappear afterwards. This procedure is called neural pruning. When a neuron receives enough stimulation from other neurons, some of the channels in the cell membrane open, making a series of complicated charge changes of ions in axon, including the positive ions like Na(+), K(+), Ca(++) and other negative ions. This exchange affects straight to the end of axon, and consequently causing the terminal buttons to open, releasing certain chemicals we known as neuron-transmitters, in which in turns affact other neurons. And then the neurons give rise to fire. The change in charge that moves from the cell membrane to the terminal button in the axon is known as an action potential. The communication between neurons occurs in the synapse, leading the movements of impulses. The neuron-transmitters flow across the synaptic cleft, where they bind to receptors and trigger events in the receiving neuron. The brain sends and receives information from the sense organs through the twelve cranial nerves, where they link the brain through tiny holes in the cranium. The cranium is the part of the skull that encloses the brain. If this part of the brain was damaged, it probably cause the disconnection both from the inputs and outputs. Macroscopically, there are four major lobes in each hemisphere. They are the occipital lobe, the temporal lobe, the parietal lobe, and the frontal lobe. The occipital lobe is responsible for the visual inputs. The visual stimuli sent out from thalamus to the occipital lobe, forming the recognition of the seeing objects. The temporal lobe is involved in language comprehension, hearing, storing new memories, and some aspects of consciousness. The upper area is called Wernicke’s area. The parietal lobe is responsible for size and location in space, and is also involved in consciousness. The frontal lobe is involved in critical thinking, speech production, searching for memories, problem solving, planning, and decision making. Each lobe is duplicated, one on the left hemisphere and the other is on the right hemisphere. The left hemisphere in charge of language and analysing the music and partial information. The right hemisphere plays a larger role than the left in recognizing overall information and some nonverbal functions, and appreciation of music. During brain development, the environment will affect the brain structure among neurons, and the same with its function by cutting off the connections that are not well-functioned, which also causes the brain to form new connections in response to increased activity. 2.1.2 The Importance of Hippocampus The hippocampus plays a major role in human brains, which belongs to the limbic system. Its functions are to consolidate the information from the short-term memory to long-term memory, and to navigate the spatial circumstances. Mammals, particularly, humans owns two hippocampuses in each hemisphere. They lie in the middle of the temporal lobes. Not all the information will be stored in this area. Some will be categaried by the hippocampus before sent to the long-term memory units, and consequently stored in the brain. The damage to the hippocampus would cause the oxygen starvation. What’s the worse, if someone is hurt in both side of hippocampus, he will suffer the syndrome called amnesia, which is characterized by the disfunction of forming and keeping new memories. However, it still works out in some types of memories, such as cognitive skill, including solving a problem, doing a puzzle, or playing a musical instrument, and so on. Thanks to the bilateral symmetry of the hippocampus, if one hemisphere is damaged, it will not affect the overall area, leaving the other hemisphere intact. If two hemispheres are damaged, it will cause the situations mention above. Therefore, the researchers discovered that there would exist multiple memory systems functioning different memory procedures, and each region in the brain is responsible for different memory systems. These findings will be discussed in chapter three. The long-term potentiation (hereafter named LTP), has been universally acknowledged as one of the major neural mechanisms. The theories reckoned that the information was learned time and time again as it passed by. In that case, it will fasten the speed of learning process. Psychologists and neuroscientists reached an agreement on that hippocampus forms new information on the matter one had experienced, here we can call it episodic memory. Though there is undoubtedly assumption that hippocampus plays a profound role in the working process of memory, it still remains the question that what the real function and essence of the hippocampus will be. 2.1.3 Evaluation of Short-term Memory and Long-term Memory PICTURE 2.1 The Procedure of Memory (From Fundamentals of Cognitive Psychology by R. R. Hunt & H. C. Ellis. 2006, Beijing: Post & Telecom Press.) Psychologists begin their answers to the question by making a distinction between short-term and long-term memory. But these terms are just labels that describe the fact that some information is retained for a short time, while other information is retained for a long time. The real question is, what are the psychological processes that cause this difference in retention? James (1890) first made an distinction between the short-term memory and long-term memory. He defined the primary memory as short-term memory, which was described as the spontaneous moment that would fade away and it was supposed to be the content of the consciousness; and secondary memory as long-term memory, which was described as a inactive state, once the things you thought about but currently you were not. According to James’ description, short-term memory was an active state of memory while long-term memory was an inactive state of memory. Another assumption emerged as scholars shifted their eyes on the approach named levels of processing. They totally believed that short-term memory and long-term memory were stored in different memory systems. They declared that those memories were located in different areas in the brain. But it had many variable affecting its storage results. Recent researches focused on the retention and manipulation of the information of stored in brain. It was described much like a set of storage systems, and each of them differ in operating seperate functions. One of the sayings was that the short-term memory triggered the work with information stored in the long-term memory. This point of view introduced the concept of working memory and we can also get the evidence in the field of neuroscience. The three-stage model theory was initiated by Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968, 1971) and Waugh and Norman (1965). This model not only illustrated different types of memory stores, but clarified the how was information processed. Later research show that information get access to long-term memory without passing through short-term memory. And it claimed that rehearsal just helps memorization if people think about the information. Undoubtedly, it did represent some fundamental theories for the subsequent studies. Sensory memory (SM) is responsible for most of the perceptual inputs, including hearing, seeing, smelling, etc., for a short time (typically less than a second). As sensory memory retains the information by the random occasions for just one seconds, while the short-term memory (STM) holds information for several seconds; for instance, if people keep saying the object time and time again, they will retain the information in STM (typically for about 30 seconds). STM stores the information in the form of separate pieces. It is easy to be forgotten because of decay of the trace as its capacity for storage is limited. What is the capacity of short-term memory? When will it reach the maximum? Miller (1965) argued that the capacity for short-term memory was about 7 plus or minus 2 chunks at once, but more recent research suggests that the number could be more like 4 chunks. The definition of a chunk is not precise as the amount of information changes according to different sorts of materials or personal perception or understanding of background information. We have only one chunk when we were at the age of three, then the capacity increased every two years till it reached the amount of seven. Subsequent researches showed that adults have priority for more chunks when at the mental age of 15. The number possibly changes as one’s interest and background information altered. And duration of short-term memory is 15 to 30 seconds. The way that shift from short-term memory to long-term memory (LTM) is rehearsal. The capacity for LTM is far more than that short-term have, till now there was no reports declared it had an exact limit. LTM stores the information combining with vivid pictures, meaningful words, and emotional actions that you experienced in the past. Each part of long-term memory owns different functions in detail. Evidence for the distinction between short-term memory and long-term memory has been shown in a number of studies. A hundred years ago, Hermann Ebbinghaus (1850-1909), a German philosopher and pioneer in the memory field, undertook a couple of experiments to testify his ideas on memory. Proudly, Ebbinghaus’s findings were the first solid evidence that showed short-term memory distinct from long-term memory in different operations ways. His experimental procedure went like this: at the first period of time, he listed several digits and nonsense syllables, such as cac, rit, and the like, those words made by himself were not existing ones in the dictionary but could be pronounced. Ebbinghaus wrote out a set of these stimuli, and every word was wrote on the listed card, then he recited one of them at a time. After a period of time, he checked each of words learned by memorizing. Ebbinghaus found the same results as many other researchers did, claiming that the first word and the last word in the list of nonsense syllables were easier to be remembered than those in the middle of the list, because their position were easily to be noticed than other words as they were repeated more times than other ones. The more time we spend on noticing the information we intend to remember, the more chances of possibility for us to make it easier to store it effectively in LTM. Another distinction between short-term memory and long-term memory is the kind of information that stored in the memory traces. It assumes that long-term memory stores the information in the form of its meaning, while short-term memory stores information by means of sound patterns. Therefore, long-term memory storage is based on a semantic code, whereas short-term memory is based on the phonetical code. Technically, rote repetition can not lead the short-term memory to the long-term memory. The brain cut off those meaningless or not well organized information for efficient storage. 2.1.4 Schemata Frederic Bartlett, a British psychologist, initially introduced the concept of schemata into psychology and education. This theory held the idea that organized knowledge, which was described as an elaborate network of abstract mental structures that precisely reflect one’s understanding of the outside world. While the schema theory was developed by the educational psychologist R. C. Anderson. And Jean Piaget introduced the term schema in 1926. Thus it was not an entirely new concept. Anderson, however, expanded the meaning. A schema (pl. schemata or schemas), is a concept mentioned in psychology and cognitive science, which is described as an organized pattern of thought or behaviour, a mental structure that reficts some aspects of the outside world, some concrete knowledge or cognitive representation, mental framework on a specific theme that helps us to rebuild social information, or certain structures combing our knowledge and assumptions about something, serving as a tool for interpreting and processing information confronting our daily lives. The theories of Frederic Bartlett on memory look back on study of retention with consciousness. Ebbinghaus emphasized on the probability of recall, while Frederic Bartlett paid no attention on it. Instead, he defined the recall as the effort after meaning, and he described it as a mental process that included initially searching and consequently rebuilding the information. Frederic Bartlett definitely against the idea on using the nonsense syllabus as the learning materials. He confirmed there would be certain losses in the process of memory when avoiding some background information that connected the new information. The main strategy was reconstruction. A very famous research was undertook in South Africa on the recall of the Indian folks. The grammar and structure was totally different, comparing the background information that the British participants were familiar with. Particularly, the story had less explicit association, and some reader encountered many vivid dramatic images and supernatural incidences. Nevertheless, those factors were avoided in Ebbinghaus’s experiment. What Frederic Bartlett concerned most about were the content and structure of the information during the research. It can be concluded from the experiment that recall is not merely a process involving with a simple rebuilding or forgetting of a matter. It is much more like a process of reconstruction as time changes. People use schemata to reconstruct the old information for providing a new mental framework of the current events. Schemata affects our daily lives as we find things are familiar with our own experiences. We explore it, and we rebuild it. Thereafter, people believed that memory was not merely disappear and appear at random as Ebbinghaus described. Those materials that the participant seemed to be unfamiliar with, at the same time, had less connections with their daily lives prone to disappear consequently. And that phenomenon exactly coincide with the participants’ experiences. Based on these results, Frederic Bartlett introduced the schemata theory. It is the positive organization of the past experiences. The individuals altered the content and order of the memory by reconstruction and conduction. Therefore, he proposed an idea that recall is a process of reconstruction, but not merely repetition as Ebbinghaus described. In the terms Frederic Bartlett mentioned, recall requires such an ability like: the individual is supposed to alter to the personal schemata by searching logical orders according to the acquisition with consciousness, and reconstruct them, making sure they congruent with his own experiences. It is reported that moods accounts for the construction of schemata. People in a dominant, typical emotional state will affect their understanding of the information and framework building. Thus, a sad person tents to construct a negative schema based on his own experiences, and reconstruct negative schema in the later period of time in his life. He interprets everything from a negative perspective. A sad schema predispose a person to encode things with negative events more readily than positive events, it also directs a person’s retrieval to certain memories, which are related with sad content. The idea of a negative schema is part of general cognitive theories of depression. The researcher Aaron Beck presented the idea that specific stressful situations where the cause of depression. Related approach was proposed by Hediund Rude in 1995, who found evidence for latent depressive schemas in remitted depressed patients who recalled a series of negative words and showed more negative interpretative perspectives than the control group who were not depression prevailing participants. Nevertheless, the status of the schema concept has been taking more prevailing position in recent years, and it is a clearly useful and important concept for human beings to know better about how the brain works. 2.1.5 Levels of Processing Different from working memory, levels of processing is regarded as a process of short-term memory retention and long-term memory retention. It provides the idea that the brain has separate storage systems, but takes eyes on the types of processes which associated with different levels of retention. There are two assumptions for levels of processing. The first assumption is that the memory trace is a by-product of perception and comprehension. The things we remember are the things we paid more attention to. For instance, if we are introduced to someone else, we paid too much attention to his appearance such as the person’s clothes, or his facial expressions; finally, we probably cannot remember the person’s name. Another important implication of the first assumption accounts for the role of intent to remember. The implication is that intent to remember is not crucial. We seldom pay our attention to things as they happen to us, however, we do try to look back on the experiences we have. On the contrary, rehearsal consciously is the key factor in the theories of short-term and working memory. For levels of processing, memory is the by-product of perception and comprehension of the related events, instead of intending to remember things. The second assumption of levels of processing is that retention has close relation with the processing of meaning. Semantic processing in memory is more likely to make better recall than nonsemantic processing in the learning process. It emphasizes that the more we are familiar with the materials and encoding them with what we understand it, the more likely we tend to remember the information than we expected. Semantic processing is assumed to be deep level of processing and nonsemantic processing categorized as shallow. Therefore, the term “levels of processing” was proposed. According to the explanation Craik and Lockhart, the reason why would semantic processing produce better memory than nonsemantic processing is that semantic traces last longer than nonsemantic traces. 2.2 Vocabulary Acquisition 2.2.1 The Previous Studies on Vocabulary Acquisition Vocabulary can be divided into hearing vocabulary, speaking vocabulary, reading vocabulary, and writing vocabulary. Many researchers of those studies have separately been focusing on the vocabulary teaching methods, the rules and functions of words, as well as the principles of vocabulary teaching, linguistic theories and vocabulary teaching, culture and vocabulary teaching, etc.. Surprisingly, they seldom mentioned the mnemonic techniques and neuroscientific researches on vocabulary acquisition, that is the purpose of doing the study, and it is believed that the significance of it lies in the following aspects. There have been different perspectives in the development of English language teaching and learning. Some believes that English learning is based upon syntax and text structures completely, therefore, learning vocabulary seemed to be useless, thus, some schools insist on grammar is the best policy, vocabulary plays a less important role in language teaching. While some insist that the process of learning English is actually the process of learning English vocabulary and grammar, and they believe that adequate English vocabulary and grammar will be a great help in the learning process. In the late 1970s, communicative approach was taking a prevailing position, it emphasized on communication, and language learners would absorb new vocabulary naturally through their conversations instead of starring at the word list every day. To some extent, it draws a conclusion that vocabulary learning plays a crucial role in the learning process. Thus, how to find an effective method becomes a question ahead of time. In this thesis, mind-mapping is one of the overriding means of vocabulary learning, which belongs to the semantic memory of the multiple memory systems. For the majority of the human mental works are involved with the process of memorizing, for instance, a simple action, an imagination of something, knowledge acquiring and so on. It is the center of human intellectual functioning and, finally, is involved with all works from cognition to recognition. Ellis (1987) illustrates the point of view that memory is like a static bin of fact, by which letting you to imagine the life without memory. And also he notes a vitally important implication of memory loss, which you usually take it for granted but positioned in the central part of memory in the human behavior. With no memory for the past, you would probably have no basis for predicting for the future lives. Thus, memory is one of the supplement factors in the process of knowing the outer space and it is an indispensable tool in recognition and solution confronting in our daily lives. 2.2.2 The Difference Between Acquisition and Learning In the study of second language acquisition, researchers defined the words acquisition and learning from multiple perspectives. First, researchers like Krashen in 1981 distinguished between “acquisition” and “learning”. The former refers to the subconscious process of “picking up” a language through exposure and the latter to the conscious process of studying it. According to this view, it has great possibility for learners to “acquire” or to “learn” rules independently and at separate times. Although such a distinction can have strong face validity, particularly for teachers, it is problematic, not least because of the difficulty of demonstrating whether the knowledge learners possess is of the “acquired” or “learnt” kind. Second, researchers disagree about what kind of performance they think provides the best evidence of acquisition. We have already noted that some researchers work with production data, some study learners’ intuitions about the second language, while others access learners’ introspections. Also, some researchers like Bickerton in 1981 considers a feature has been acquire when it appears for the first time, while others like Dulay and Burt in 1980 require the learner to use it to some predetermined criterion level of accuracy, usually 90 percents. Thus, a distinction can be made between acquisition as “emergence” or “onset” and acquisition as “accurate use”. (Ellis, 1999, pp. 14) Clearly “acquisition” can mean different sorts of things, which makes it very difficult to compare the results of one study with those of another. Conflicting results can be obtained depending on whether the data used consists of the learners’ productions, introspections, or intuitions, or whether emergence or accuracy serves as the criterion of acquisition. That is why it is important to examine carefully the nature of the data used and the way in which acquisition has been measured, when reading reports of actual studies. (ibid., p.15) 2.2.3 Methods for Vocabulary Acquisition: Mind-mapping Like the other creatures in universe, vocabulary had gone through a long period of time shifting from the simple structure to much more complicated structure in the right track. Words are formed by a bunch of meaningless letters, every single letter does not make any sense unless they combine with each other. That is to say, words could have meaning when they are combined. And this just meets the concept of mind-mapping, thus, we combine these two things together for vocabulary acquisition. Words have similarity in pronunciation, structure, and meaning, therefore, we can memorize words either by the previous ones, things around us, or idioms learnt before. Tricks for improving memory typically require elaborative encoding and often involve either visualizing objects interacting with other objects or forming organized units where none previously existed. The essential element is that you organize the material so that you integrate it, making connections between what you want to remember and what you already know. 2.2.3.1 Mind-mapping Mind-mapping was firstly proposed by the British scholar Tony Buzan, a worldwide famous study specialist, claiming that students could draw a well organized graph by colors, lines, signals, lexicons, and pictures, which shifted the dreary information to a colorful, easy-to-remember graph. It could be done by a single person, or a group. The central part of the mind-mapping was a concept or a graph, all the main ideas spreaded to all directions but connected to the center. Every main idea spreaded again to make sub-main ideas, and the rest could be done in the same manner. It turned out to be a more sufficient strategy ever in vocabulary acquisition than mechanical repetition. The deeper the brain processes the information, the more chance of remembering would occur. People remember things according to association, by which means the association is the bridge connects the new and the old information. Students experienced the brain storm in mind-mapping, and formed their own cognitive framework in mind. Cognitive psychologists believed that the capacity of people’s short-term memory is 7 plus or minus 2 chunks. Memorizing words separately would be a limitation for vocabulary acquisition. Nowadays, most of the words are isolated in the learning process for college students, not to mention that they could form them in word network. In fact, words to some extent have similarity both in structure and meaning, on this point, we can combine words according to these two characters, and order the reticular structure to form a new network, which is the so-called mind-mapping. Different colors and graphics in mind-mapping provides a visual mental framework and knowledge structure for better understanding of the words, meanwhile, demonstrates the connections and diversities among themselves. During the process of drawing mind-mapping, students selected and summarized the information systematically by observing the word structure and analyzed the meaning of the word. Learning a new word is the reviewing of the related previous words. Consequently, it combined all the words in the network. Once the student could not remember a word, he or she would associate it with its synonyms, and antonyms learnt before, which was an efficient way of comprehension and recognition for vocabulary acquisition. 2.2.3.2 Other Strategies for Vocabulary Acquisition English, unlike French, Germany, Russian words that every word matches its spelling and its pronunciation; it hinders students from recognizing and acquiring. However, if we abandon it as a tool of reciting, it will be a great loss. The difference between pronunciation and spelling are as follows: first, there are 26 letters in English, but 48 morphemes, inevitably, it means that a letter must be read for a couple of sounds; second, it maintains many other languages, nevertheless, the pronunciation of those words did not change too much. Those reasons and countless tiny differences made English it is today. Even though, the American did a research in the 70s of 20th century, pointed out 84% of the English words in 17,000 words were regularly match its spelling rules. For instance, “ai” pronounces /ei / and /i/, thus, we infer the pronunciations like the words “bargain”, “train”, etc.. The second method is that we recognize words by derivation, compounding, blending, clipping. Usually, a word consists of prefix, suffix and root. In detail, we can recite vocabularies by remembering the meaning of them. And I’ll clarify them in the following paragraphs. Derivation is a common method for memorizing words, which is divided into prefix and suffix. As we all know, “un-”, “dis-”, “non-”, etc., they mean the opposite when they occurs in front of some words. “fore-“, “post-”, “re-”, “pre-”, they indicate the time and order. “anti-”, “pro-”, “counter-”, they indicate direction and attitude about something. “-er”, “-ant”, “-ist”, they infer the position or work for someone. “-ful”, “-ish”, “-less”, “-ive”, they are suffixes followed by the adjectives. “-en”, “-fy”, “-ize”, they followed by the verbs. Compounding is made by two or more words, and the word can be nous, verbs, such as “moonlight”, “sunglasses”, “golden-hearted”, “wooden-made”, “green hand”, “homesick”, “eyesight”, etc.. Blending is the combination of two words, and each of them is shortened by a part and makes a new word. For instance, motel (motor + hotel), brunch (breakfast + lunch), Chunnel (channel + tunnel), sitcom (situation + comedy), workfare ( work + fare), Medicare (medical + care), etc.. Clipping refers to a word is cut off by some part, the front part or the latter, but does not make its meaning changed. The purpose of this kind of method is to make it clear and easy to be remembered, usually, the clipped words are shorter than the original one. Let’s take an example, “ad” is the short form of “advertisement”, “buz” is shortened form for “business”, “rep” for “representative”, “pro” for “propose”, “fridge” for “refrigerator”, “phone” for “telephone”, “flu” is short for “influenza”, and “zoo” is the short form for “zoological garden”, etc.. Acronyms are also a sort of practical memory strategy. For example, H.O.M.E.S is the short form for the five lakes in the United States; they are Lake Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior. 2.3 Memory Strategies 2.3.1 Multiple Memory Systems in the Brain Memory is a multi-functional unit, which includes many different systems for processing particular functions. Every system is a separate unit functioning particular sort of information, and each sector handles different resources based on its neural areas. The origin of the systems approach was firstly proposed by Tulving, in whose theory mentioned the distinction between episodic memory and semantic memory. The episodic memory in charge of personal experiences, and the information stored in this area responsible for one’s particular prior experiences. Semantic memory corresponds to stored general knowledge and most of the teaching procedures have related to this sort of memory system. Thus, the two systems handle different sorts of information, and process them based on particular rules. 2.3.1.1 The Semantic Memories Semantic memories are memories of the meanings of the words, concepts, and general facts about the world. The working procedure is a little complicated. First, the hippocampus provides short-term information to the temporary storing area in the lobe waiting for checking, supposing the information is associated with the former stored information thus they are send to the working memory in the frontal lobes; then working memory recheck and recategorize those old and new information; according to the prior knowledge and interests, those information are connected to each other, so that they can shift more into long-term information, but the procedure needs more times to remain stable. The semantic memories are much more likely activated by association, comparison and analogy. When the semantic memories cannot be processed by multiple learning methods, it is impossible for the brain to build neural connections. The following methods are helpful in the teaching process; hopefully, they are best ways for teachers who are still in the confusions. Firstly and highly recommended strgaategy: graphic organizers. They are considered to be the most effective methods for the semantic memories, such as mind-mapping or webbing, some researchers named it as power pictures. The second part of this chapter has more details about this method. Peer teaching is also an ideal method for the semantic memories, which provides access to personal communication skills and reviewing. Every two student are divide into a group, and they are required to teacher what they learned with each other in turns. The process provides opportunities for evaluations and analysis. And other methods such as questioning strategies, summarizing, role-playing, debates, outlining, time line, practice tests, paraphrasing, mnemonic devices, music, etc.. They are all supplementary teaching methods in language learning. 2.3.1.2 The Episodic Memories Episodic memories sometimes are called contextual memories or spatial memories. They are memories of events that connected with a particular time, place, circumstance, that is to say, it provides a context for learners in the learning process. The entrance for episodic memories is in the hippocampus, and its important component is somewhat called invisible information. For instance, the walls, the windows, and the desks in the classroom are hints when remembering something you learned before, if you are taking an English exam in this classroom, and you can’t remember the word in your mind, then you would think about just in this classroom you learned it, even the clothes of the teacher that day you get to know it little by little, finally, you can recite exactly the word. 2.3.1.3 The Procedural Memories The procedural memories are also called “muscle memories”, which are responsible for the storage and use of skills. These motor and memory-related skills are stored in epencephalon. As they cause the work of two different areas in the brain, thus there is no need to worry about the energy or spatial conflicts. All those repeating action procedures such as tying the shoelaces, riding bicycles and so on, are stored in the procedural memories. Another good example of the procedural memories was practiced in our teaching strategy class, the foreign teacher Ms Ruskin asked one of us to demonstrate a series of actions, with every action applied with a pair of phrase, like “turn on the water, take the soap, wash the hands, turn off the water, take a towel...”, all those actions are automatic without the involvement of consciousness. Those action acquired in the action can be recollected in the same state. As teachers, we can also inspire students in the following methods: First, ask the students to repeat what they learned till they can remember them, and making sure they are stored in the memory system automatically. Alternatively, teachers can design some actions served as the tool for memorizing. That is because then an action is repeated over and over again, the brain will store it in the epencephalon for starting the procedure. Everything related to action helps to strengthen the procedural memories. Or, when a teacher is teaching some materials, one of the students is asked to stand up and walk along the classroom, when come to some point, the student is supposed to do some actions to show whether he can understand. If he understands one point he jump, if he understands them all, then he clap his hands. 2.3.1.4 The Emotional Memories The emotional memories are stored in the frontal lobe, the area of amygdala, near the hippocampus. These memories are activated by other memory systems, thus interrupts the logical thinking in the brain. Hippocampus is the last mature organ in the forebrain till when we are three years old, which is the reason why cannot we remember the matter before three. Whereas the amygdala grows well in the brain. People may have some emotional memories, but, they have no strong evidence to show its validity. As time goes by, those memories are not reliable enough for them to prove the past affires. Both positive and negative emotions cause the brain to release particular neural transmitters, which strengthen the memory. Debates and role play effectively activated students’ emotions. As for teachers, if they show great passion on the topic or the activity, the students will be moved by the contagious environment; if they are willing to share the feelings about what you are teaching, the students seem to feel the same way. The dendrates in the brain seeking for the new information all the time, nevertheless, they are not from books, at this time, teachers should analyse those information into understandable codes by multiple memory systems. Initially, begin with the episodic memories, then try the procedural memories. Besides, add more celebrations in the beginning and the end of the unit for strengthening better memory. 2.3.2 Mnemonic Devices The word mnemonic is derived from the Greek word, meaning memory. Tricks for improving memory typically need elaborative encoding and often either visualizing objects interacting with other objects or forming organized units where there is no previously existing ones. The core for the material you organized is that once you integrate it and what you’ve known before. As we all know, those memory tricks depend on a good organization and integration. 2.3.2.1 Method of Loci: Getting Things in Their Right Places Probably the most effective mnemonic device is to use the interactive image. The key to mnemonics is to figure out a way to organize the information that people can link something new with something that had already stay in your mind. The method was discovered by the ancient Greek orator Simonides, and the word loci, the plural form of locus, is derived from a Latin word which means place. The story went like that, he was attending a banquet on evening, then he was called out the house to get a message from someone. After he went out of the room, unfortunately, the ceiling began to shake and it collapsed, mangling the guests’ body, which was hardly to recognize. When asked who had before the party, Simonides realized that he could easily remember all the faces of the guest if he visualized every guest sitting at the table. This inspired him to create method of mnemonic technique now was called method of loci. To use this sort of method, first you should memorize a couple of locations, and visualize each of to-be-remembered objects in a different location as you mentally walk through the house,later you repeat that mental walk and to recall or to see what is in each location. For example, imagine that you are in your room, then you walk through the door, and come to the table, then the dining room, and same the like. Second, take out a shopping list that lists all the objects you want to buy. Third, try to mentally walk to the door and put an umbrella (the object on the shopping list) next to the door, and a ball on the table, and a watermelon in the dinning room, and you might visualize all the objects in your mind. The fourth step is to recall, you walk through those locations, finally, you get them all. And it is also one of the reasons why people are more likely to remember things when taking an exam in the same classroom that once we were having classes, of course, it is as well related to the episodic memory. People recite the same environment, the same experience, and they get more chances to recall what they had learned. The Italian priest Matteo Ricci had also mentioned this sort of method called memory palace. 2.3.2.2 Peg Word System: Making a Clue The peg word system is similar to the method of loci, except that you remember a couple of locations instead of a couple of ordered objects. For example, you might memorize a list of rhymes, such as “One is a car, two is a shoe, three is a door, four is a tree, five is a pen”, etc.. Then you can regard the memorized objects (car, shoe, door, tree, pen) in the same way as the method of location. You can associate the first object as the item in your shopping list. In that case, when you want to memorize them on the list, try to remember the peg word (car, shoe, door, etc.) to figure out what is associated with. The method of loci, interactive imagery, and peg word method was considered to be the most effective mnemonics according to the investigation in the 1980s. However, there are many types of memories, and people differ in how well they can use these techniques. Find some suitable and more efficient ones for yourself is the key for memory training. Previously, this chapter introduced the related theories in cognitive neuroscience, working procedure in the brain involves the connections between neurons, along with the floating ions like Na and K causing action potential, making more increasing number of dendrites, which is assumed to have close relations with learning, particularly, hippocampus is view as a crucial role in human memory. Researches showed that long-term memory storage is larger beyond what people can imagine. Learning occurs in the period of connections between neurons. As the connections between neurons increased, dendrites appear one after another, synapse is strengthened as well. The more connections among those neurons through learning and review old information time after time, the more effective it will be in the process of connection. Besides, social communication, sports, challenge are positive factors for the increasing number of dendrites. It is said that there are 1,000 to the power of five neurons in the brain. Simply, take a needle as an example, the space contains 30,000 neurons is just like a needle in the daily life, and each of them could make a connection with 5,000 to 10,000 neurons at the same time. Thus people could imagine tens of thousands of neurons astonishingly exist in our brain. What a number ! And those neurons spread in the upper part of the brain called neocortex. Usually, kids build their schemata through making connections between neurons. For instance, a kid easily associated the sparrow with butterfly or airplane, which is called neural network. The more consequently appears between connections in the neural network, the more possibility of consolidating the information. And the synapse will be strengthened. As the neurons are activated more consequently, the more chances of possibility for dendrites and axons to get used to this kind of connection. As the neural network operates efficiently, the information is passed more smoothly. In the theory of schemata, memory can be thought of as a mental process of reconstruction, rather than a structural system that contains traces. The negative schemata to a great extent affect one’s cognition of the outside world and constantly in the reconstruction in later life time. Levels of processing is based on two fundamental assumptions. The first is that the memory trace is a by-product of perception and comprehension. The second assumption of levels of processing is that retention has close relation with the processing of meaning. Semantic processing in memory is more likely to make better recall than nonsemantic processing in the learning process. Semantic processing is assumed to be deep level of processing and nonsemantic processing categorized as shallow. Then the author discussed many methods for vocabulary acquisition, such as affixes, suffixes, derivation, compounding, blending, and clipping. Particularly, one of the most effective and practical way for vocabulary acquisition was discussed, that is, mind-mapping, and it will be explained in more details in the latter chapters. Ways of improving the odds of retaining information in memory include linking visual images with text, that is called dual coding, and thinking through information, that is to say, to widen the depth and breadth of processing; and studying in small chunks while trying to integrate and organize the material, which means distributed practice. Mnemonics can easily double the recall and are well worth the effort of learning and trying. Using mnemonic devices not only helps stduents learn something at the first place but, later on they forget it, it helps them be able to relearn it more effectively. Here are some principles for memory techniques: Firstly, recall is better when someone mentally reinstates the environment in which the information was learned. If someone wants to remember something, then try to remember where he were and when did he learned it, and even the weather it was that day, and how did he feel that day, all those details are the most valuable hint for memory. As they are the best illustration for episodic memory and procedural memory and emotional memory. Secondly, focusing on the task. As searching for information in long-term memory requires effort but, it is easily disrupted by other stimuli. Thus, if someone need to remember well, focus on the task and shutting out the distractions. Thirdly, keep trying. The more times people remember something, the more likely he is eventually to retrieve it. This is based on the idea of levels of processing. Things are likely to be remembered when people try to think of it and connect more detailed information on it. Based on the neurological ideas that there exits more connections among neurons, and each one of them is responsible for the information from the outside world. Fourthly, if someone indeed cannot remember something immediately, try to think of the related information, such as, the characteristics, the category of the target. Fisher and his colleagues, in their study in 1989 advised detectives that if a witness could not remember a criminal’s face or name, they are suggested to remember its syllable, ethnic origin, its length, such like that. These association are served as retrieval cues, helping the witness to memorize something. Chapter 3 The Study of Mind-mapping in Vocabulary Acquisition 3.1 Introduction of Research Background The design of this chapter includes the following sections: the hypothesis of the paper, that is, students can improve their memory by using the mind-mapping, which belongs to the semantic memory system of the multiple memory system; the subjects of the experiment, who are the freshmen of the English major in our school; the experimental procedure and the data collected from this experiment; and detailed discussion on mind-mapping in the process of learning. As rote learning is still very popular in China and it have been considering most effective way of reciting. Students follow the instructions undoubtedly, thus, repeating isolated words day after day, year after year. Mind-mapping initiated by the English scholar Tony Buzan, along with the idea radiant thinking, which was first used to treat the handicapped and people who had trouble with reading. It is a visual tool for the language learning. And it became known across the country by improving the memory capability of British Prince Charles. The concept of mind-mapping is based on the cognitive psychological ideas that the limited capacity for short-term memory is 7 minus or plus 2 chunks. The thinking process in human brain is filled with images and association. With the help of mind-mapping, it combines the left hemisphere responsible for logic, order and right hemisphere in charge of images, color, dimension and so on, which makes the brain works in a multiple dimensions like the radiant radar. Learning words separately leads to the limited memory capacity. Word lists for freshmen usually do not have any connection, thus, we use mind-mapping to connect words according to their characters, and form an invisible network. Actually, it still works out in the other fields. 3.2 The Present Study 3.2.1 Research Questions Question one Can mind-mapping help students with enlarging vocabulary? Question two Is mind-mapping an effective way of long-term memory storage? With the help of mind-mapping, students do enhance their memory ability in the process of vocabulary acquisition, which makes sure that the learners can have the tendency and consciousness of connecting between the old information and new ones when absorbing new content. 3.2.2 Subjects Considering the veracity of this experiment, freshmen majored in English, which were from Class Ten in Shenyang Normal University had been selected as subjects. and making sure that those students had the same level, the author checked their English levels with the help of their class advisor, founding that each of them passed the entrance examination with the average score 110, besides, the average age were 18.9. According to the descriptions of the class advisor, students in Class 10 were very energetic and had the strong will of receiving new things, thus, it was a dominant factor for doing this experiment in a smooth way. At this period, they had already formed certain learning habits and possessed suitable self-thought methods, therefore, mastering some other strategies of vocabulary acquisition became ahead of time. And that was one of my reasons for choosing freshmen as my experimental objects. Before they came to the university, they’ve accumulated a number of vocabulary, for that reason, we draw the conclusion that previous accumulation was the basis of later knowledge. During the experiment, they received mails in the public mail box in the very beginning of the semester, telling them how to learn words effectively, and many memory strategies introduced by famous scholars, meanwhile, they were asked to complete a pre-test questionnaire. And they were found eager to learn and energetic in class. After a period of time, they got used to the method, in particular, mind-mapping after the explanation during the extra hour, they were encouraged to draw maps on their own, and it lasted for a few months. Throughout the semester, the author collected the information about their improvement and confusion by asking them to write reflection journals, so that the distinctions and connections between learners could be found. 3.2.3 Methodology 3.2.3.1 Questionnaire The pre-test questionnaire includes four parts: (1) motivation; (2) class interaction; (3) learning strategy; (4) truth-telling. During the investigation, the writer adopted an anonymous method to make sure the data more precise and real. Part one The aim of this part is to collect students’ information about their learning attitudes. Part two The purpose of this part is to find the other factors that will affect students’ learning, for instance, learning environment, personalities, teachers’ positive encouragement, etc.. Part three The aim of this part is to investigate whether the students know how to use certain strategies for vocabulary acquisition and knowledge acquisition. Part four The purpose of this part is to build an open and harmonious environment for every students, so that they would tell their true feelings and suggestions. After the investigation, the author collected the information, founding that most of them had positive tendency: they were intent to learn new things, they had clear goal of study, and they proned to cooperate with the teachers. All these factors above provide an ideal preposition of the experiment. 3.2.3.2 Reflection Journal The post-test reflection journal includes feedback from the students who had used mind-mapping, and other learning strategies given before. After the application of mind-mapping, the collected information showed that they at first did not know too much of mnemonics, as they sticked to the traditional methods, but after the intervene of certain teaching methods, such as mind-mapping, and related knowledge of working procedure in the brain. Only if the teacher and students know the rules can they work effectively. 3.2.4 Experimental Procedure This was a longitudinal experiment which last a whole semester of four months, The materials were collected from the VOA news and text book. The teacher conducted the lessons in class, and after class the students were required to review what they’d learnt as usual, and they had assignment of drawing the mind-mapping based on the materials (learning strategies, memory tricks, prefixes, compounding words, etc.) given in the public mailbox after class. 3.2.4.1 Preparation Before the experiment, the author regularly sent e-mails on mind-mapping and other learning strategies to the public mailbox day by day, meanwhile, certain details were explained to them before class. Students were required to draw their own mind-mapping through their understanding, using the words they had learnt on class. After checking all their assignments one by one, consequently, they got used to this new method of memorzing. 3.2.4.2 Presentation. They were required to draw a map using words they learned before, and list them on the paper as many as possible, by different structures, colors, lines. But there would be a central word which connected every of them, and finally, form a new network made by words. 3.3 Implication for Vocabulary Acquisition The key period of forming language is about from the birth to ten years old. The neuron cannot make any connections if they grows to ten years old. The brain gets rid of those useless synapses, which does not mean it won’t process any learning activities, but keeps on learning and storing the information in the same speed. Getting rid of the synapses is the way for brain to cut off those useless connections, in that way, the brain will focus on more important connections or on some that have already produced ones. The essence of mind-mapping is to build connections in the form of words presented on the paper, in fact, it builds neural connections with synapses in the brain. And after a period of time, the students use their cognition to make connections among words, which can be seen as the procedure of levels of processing. The pictures on the paper serve as tools for remembering, and those repeated the words afterwards make more connections in the schemata that stored in the long-term memory. Upon this point, learners are likely to think about the working memory proposed by the British psychologist Alan Baddeley in 1974. It plays a critical part of many important cognitive activities such as problem solving, reasoning, and comprehension. As well, Baddeley (1990) assumed that working memory plays some role in storing information in long-term memory. Those separate stored memories attests to the theory that people acquire knowledge by the multiple memory systems for more effective learning. Chapter 4 The Application of Mind-mapping and Discussion 4.1 The Application of Mind-mapping As mind-mapping has many forms, and every form has its different advantages and disadvantages. Here are some typical pictures collected from the students, and they will be illustrated on by one. The examples are as follows: 4.1.1 Graphic Mind-mapping The first, comparatively simple one, is graphic mind-mapping. This sort of mind-mapping is formed by a central picture or a word, and refined with more words, which presents a vivid image. PICTURE 4.1 Graphic Mind-mapping The student lists the organs from head to toes, thus, they can directly see them in pictures. Combing the theories that people are more likely to remember information with concrete images, furthermore, learners are even more likely to remember things that are related to their daily lives, it is indeed a good way for language learning. PICTURE 4.2 Graphic Mind-mapping This pictures presents a visual image of earth. And it is easier to arouse students’ attention and provides an ideal learning expectation. 4.1.2 Grade Mind-mapping Grade mind-mapping, a particular form, owns its character as there exists strict ranking which lists words order from top levels to lower levels, and each of them can not be changed randomly. The advantage for this sort of map makes the viewers straightly know the logical connections among words. The more learners distinct them, the easier they will remember them in the network in brain. Combining the theories of levels of processing that people are more likely to remember things that are deep-processed in their mind. Therefore, student make distinctions between words to get better memory. PICTUER 4.3 Grade Mind-mapping In picture 4.3, the central word is “love”, the closer circle is “father”, “mother”, “children”, “brother”, etc.. The second branch includes “strong”, “beautiful”, “old”, “handsome”, etc.. The student illustrates every components with certain adjectives in a natural way. 4.1.3 Chain Mind-mapping Usually, the characters of chain mind-mapping are: words are spreaded one by one according to time and combination. In English, combined words are connected by two words, some has relations, some do not. PICTURE 4.4 Chain Mind-mapping In picture 4.4, “sunglass” consists two words, that are, “sun” and “glass”, the meaning for it is an object that prevent sunshine, usually worn on people’s face. 4.1.4 Free Association Mind-mapping This sort of mind-mapping has no specific rules, and there is no similar structure and no categories among them. Though it has no regularities, the students make their own knowledge structure from multiple perspectives by creative thoughts. PICTURE 4.5 Free Association Mind-mapping The picture 4.5 above was created by a student, she made this mind-mapping with no central word, but every word sticks to each other as her mind flashing those objects. All these words and images helps her remembering the related information once came across. PICTURE 4.6 Free Association Mind-mapping Picture 4.6 centered by the word “attorney”, the student associated with other terms like “gown”, “solicitor”, “barrister”, “court”, etc.. Therefore, she had more chances of acquiring knowledge. 4.2 Discussion 4.2.1 The Relation Between Mind-mapping and Memory PICTURE 4.7 The Teaching Scene Thank you so much to Professor Z, this picture was taken on her class, and these lovely students were also the precious treasures during the study. Here are more details about the mind-mapping both at home and abroad. At abroad, mind-mapping, as a radiant thinking method takes a prevailing role in the experimental subjects of the educational revolution. In England, Singapore, mind-mapping has already been the compulsory course, and it appeared in many modal teaching plans in some developed countries such as North Korea, Japan, Germany, America. Recently, mind-mapping was successfully applied into the middle schools and primary schools, the instruction for mind-mapping for kids were very popular among young parents. Proudly, professors in Harvard University, Cambridge and many excellent universities all over the world had been adapting to this new way of thinking. In the mainland, along with the stream of study revolution, mind-mapping was firstly introduced into China in 1970s. From then on, scholar paid much attention to the research and application of this new method. In 2005, Buzan visited China and being a guest in FLTRP (Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press), he started the training, which was first introduced to the Chinese language learners. 4.2.2 Other Factors Impact on Memory 4.2.2.1 Gene How do different genes affect different aspects of memory? One explanation was proposed the study of knockout mice, it derived from the particular gene that has been knockout. Later on, subsequent researches on knockout mice discoved that certain genes do influence memories, but they just effect on specific types of memories. Another way to test the effects of genes on memory is to observe which proteins are produced during a task. Specific genes release specific proteins, in that case, the researchers can infer which genes were active by tracking their signature proteins. Cavallaro and colleagues (2001) discovered that rabbits blink their eyes when they heard a tone. The subtle findin was that the number of proteins descends for many genes during the conditioning, leaving few selected ones activated. 4.2.2.2 Emotion When people are stressed or in the negative mood, the brain sends signals to your body, preparing for the response called fight-or-flight. After receiving the signals, the body produces a chemical matter called cortisol, which converts protein and fats into sugar, making sure the body is ready for fast movements. However, if a large number of cortisol stays in the body in a long period, it will be harmful for health. Spaolsky and his colleagues have shown that in rats and monkeys long-term exposure to cortisol actually kills neurons in the hippocampus, and with the decreasing number of hippocampal neurons, it finally has negative effects on memories. Whereas social circumstances cause stress or negative emotions that trigger events in the brain that disrupt memories, or lead to unconfident about one’s lives and obstacles in communications. Fortunately, the effects of stress on the hippocampus may be changed if the environment changes. People cannot focus full attention on things they are doing or, even if they are doing it, the results cannot be desirable in the condition of terrible mood or depressed and upset. If they are praised by someone else, they cannot feel better the whole day and everything goes smoothly; on the contrary, if they are criticized by the boss, they are likely to make mistakes again and again, like they are haunted by the unknown spirits when feeling really depressed. Another example, clinical observations of depressed patients reveal that they frequently show memory deficits, and showing great stress trauma, and consequently cause temporary or even prolonged amnesia. Therefore, all these proofs in daily lives or in the clinical reports indicate that certain moods do affect cognitive processes. Ellis (2000) testifies that if individuals are in a negative mood, they are more likely to make false recognitions. Here false recognition refers to “recognizing” some items or events that you did not actually experienced. In his research, he listed a series of words to the college students who were in a sad mood or were in a normal mood. In the test, the students were again shown with those words, and more words that they actually did not seen before were shown as well, finally, they were asked whether they had seen them all. The group who were in a sad mood showed greater tendency to recognize those unknown words. The conclusion can be drawn from the test that if people are in a strong mood or in an emotional state, they are more likely to make false recognitions, and the decisions they’ve made are proved to be irrational. To sum it up, emotional states play an important role in memory and cognition. This research area was booming after the year 1975. There is strong evidence for mood-congruent effects in memory, and it attested to the idea that memory reaches its best effect who someone is in a comparatively stable and positive mood. On the contrary, the evidence for mood-state-dependent memory is much more limited and the results are not pleasant. In the former experiments, depressed subjects make more accurate judgments of contingency but show greater tendency in false recognitions. 4.2.2.3 Forgetting It is a quite normal phenomenon. Hundreds of years people keep wondering why would they forget something as time goes by. When they receive the new information in a natural way, the neurons in the brain can not make the connection with the old neuron which can be called the former related information. Eventually , the new information cannot be stored in the long-term memory without the deep processing, leaving it to the inactivated situation, as time goes by, then it fades away. Therefore, it is very necessary for the learners to think about the information actively before it is abandoned, making sure that it will be stored in the long-term memory. Ebbinghaus’ forgetting curve indicates that information becomes harder to recall over time after time, but that most forgetting occurs relatively soon after learning. An encoding failure causes huge losses of information shortly after learning, which may be one reason for the sharp descending at the beginning of the forgetting curve. Even though the information is encoded, it will be lost to some extent later. Some memory researchers argued the fate of information that was once stored but then could be forgotten. One camp claimed that once the information firstly was stored then faded forever. The memory decays just as the invisible ink, they disappear forever until nothing is left. While one camp held the ideas that memories themselves are intact but cannot be found. The ink hasn’t faded, but the message has been misfiled. In fact, both camps had put their finger on the important aspects of forgetting. The invisible ink theory proposes that memories decay, that is to say, they degrade with time. The relevant connections between neurons are lost. The evidence that supports this theory is the sea slug named Aplysia, which has a relatively simple nervous system, it has been possible to document that the strength of the connections between neurons established by learning fades away over time. This argument was proposed by Baily and Chen in 1989. If human neurons are similar, as seems likely, memories may in fact decay over time. Actually, researchers have provided the evidence that not only certain genes promote stronger connections among neurons, but also that other genes prevent such are given rise to fire, they would cause the decay that store memories. Evidence refuting the decay theory seemed to come from the dramatic foundlings proposed by Penfield in 1955. Before performing brain surgery, neurosurgeons such as Penfield sometimes put small electrodes on the exposed cortex of awake patients and stimulated the neurons electrically. A few patients reported vivid images and memories of long-forgotten events. For example, on having a particular area of the brain stimulated, one patient said, “Yes, sir, I think I heard a mother calling her little boy somewhere. It seemed something that happened years ago.” At least some of these reports may not have been memories but images created on the spot. There is no strong evidence that all the memories stored forever, but in fact, oft-cited occurred only for only a minority of patients, and latter work failed to reveal compelling evidence that memories are stored forever. The view that a mix-up in memory often explains forgetting has long been supported by strong direct evidence. For example, if a student is in a new classroom, if is likely for him to associated the new names with his former classmate, and probably he call them the wrong name. Interference is the disruption of the ability to remember one piece of information by the presence of the other information. There are two types of interference: retroactive and proactive. Retroactive interference is interference that disrupts memory for something learned earlier. Like learning the new names of the new classmates can interfere with the memory of the names of the previous ones. Proactive interference is interference by something already learned that makes it difficult to learn something new. Having learned the names of previous ones may interfere with learning the names on the new class, particularly if some of the new names are similar to the old ones. Why does interference occur? The capacity of long-term is not the problem. People are not overloading a memory-for-people box in the brain; some politicians can remember hundreds of thousands of people’s names with no or less difficulties. Interference probably occurs because the retrieval cues for various memories are similar, and thus a given cue may call up the wrong memory. The more similar and known before head information you own, the more interference may occur. The fact that memory is not a single capacity but including many separate units for storage, this point of view becomes cristal clear when we look closely at how different kinds of information are stored in the long-term memory. However, how do different modalities of memories stored separately keep mysterious for decades till researchers in the neural science found that damage to particular parts of the brain can disrupt each of these types of long-term memory, as learners get to realize the inputs including visual and auditory memories are separately functioned by the organs in the brain, while leaving the others interact, and this attests to the theory that the information is stored separately. Furthermore, neuroimaging studies have found that when people recall visual versus auditory information from long-term memory and store it temporarily in short-term memory before deep levels of processing, different perceptual areas of the brain are activated according to fMRI. The fact that different areas in the brain are used for the different memories is one form of evidence proves that memories are stored when taking a cognitive task. Neuroimaging studies have provided evidence that semantic and episodic memories function differently based on their distinct perceptual procedures. The frontal lobe, for instance, plays an essential role in seeking for stored information of cognitive tasks, the reports showed that the left frontal lobe tends to be activated when we recall semantic memories. In this chapter, we discussed there are many factors like gene and emotion affect the memory procedure, and those are key points be taken into consideration. Chapter 5 Conclusion 5.1 Major findings 5.1.1 Implications for Language Learning In the cognitive learning, the previous studies discussed the working procedure of the brain, knowing that information was firstly processed by the sensory input registered in the brain, then examined by working memory, schemata stored in the previous brain system try to match the new comer and put them in order, but with the interference of Amygdala, which is responsible for the emotion control, the information could be stocked on the way to the hippocampus, the area for memory storage, that process is called the emotional memories. However, if it is possible to get access to the hippocampus, the first step that shift from short-term to long-term memory could be the retention. People retrieve the old information by seeing the object they once came across, this procedure is called the episodic memories; then what they did in the past remind them of doing it again, this process of reminding is called the procedural memories; if the situation works out when people viewing some pictures or the images they familiar with, the semantic memories make it. Meanwhile, the deep processing of the information is one of the reason for shifting from short-term memory to long-term memory, the more learners process something in detail, the more chances of remembering something. Mnemonic strategies mentioned in the previous chapter list many methods to improve memory, such as the method of loci, the key for memeorizing something is that we connect the images ( it is reported that it can be stored in the brain more than eight hours) with their daily surroundings. Of course, keeping a good and stable emotion can be quite necessary. After learning the principles and procedure of the brain, it is clearly known for leaners how to act in daily lives, they know when to stop and get access to the most effective result. Consider a young child learning the alphabet. A B C and X Y Z are not a problem for the child, but it will be harder for them to remember the middle letters. Many children in the initial stages of alphabet learning even treat L M N O P Q as a single letter. Glanzer and Cunitz (1966) testified this explanation of the serial position curve with an experiment, and proposed that the primacy and recency effects can be manipulated independently. Thus, those critical factors are taken as strong evidence for the existence of separate memory stores. Incoming information may be in the visual sensory register for up to 250 milliseconds after presentation, but converts to short-term memory on the condition of attention. Information may remain in short-term memory for up to 30 seconds, but with the involvement of rehearsal, which consequently moves the information to long-term memory. As the retrieval occurs, the work speeds up. Thus, memory is determined not only by the length of time after presentation of the material, but also by the type of processing preformed on the material. 5.1.2 Implications for English Teaching Good teachers are soul builders, they both teach students how to acquire knowledge but pure their souls. They know how and when to encourage students, for they observe each students’ desire and feelings. As a language teacher, all these factors followed should be taken into consideration when teaching. Key One From the macroscopic view, teachers, first of all, should know each students’ characters, because each one of them has different family circumstance which makes them behave in different manners. And the gene factors could influence their memory as well as emotion. Teachers can not grade them according to their scores actually. Known their characters, more attention should be paid to their feelings, for instance, if a student does not focus on the learning, teachers probably should think something happened to him or her, instead of blaming him or her bluntly. After class, teachers can have a honest conversation and figure out the reasons. Later on, both earn a win-win result. On the contrary, if a teacher blame him once, the student will be discouraged by words and never be confident, or he lose the interest in this subject. From the neuroscientific view, it works well in the brain because of the release of dopamine if someone is happy. Researches also indicated that people in a good mood would bring positive effect on the storage of memory. Key Two Focusing on the vocabulary acquisition, there are many strategies introduced in the former chapters, in which chapter 2 presents the methods for better memorization, such as affixes, suffixes, key word memory and so on. Mnemonic strategies such like method of loci, peg word method. The most compelling teaching method is the multiple memory systems, which include the semantic memories, students remember words by using images, and mind-mapping considered to be comparatively useful measure; on the episodic memories, students are easily remember the words where they are learned in the same place during the exams; the procedural memories, which is the best illustration was once on the foreign teacher Ms Ruskin, a woman who had been teaching us on reading, speaking, listening, writing strategies, she asked a group of students to bring some objects, and did actions to make every word a sentence, like “turn on the water”, then “wash the hand”, and then “take the soap”, etc., till now it is still remembered clearly, and the strategy she used was the best illustration of the procedural memories. Key Three Still talking about Ms Ruskin. She was a really smart woman to arouse interest of the students during the class. She brought surprises in the majority of the class, things like rhythm songs “Ana Banana”, tasting some mysterious food leaves, circling together and telling stories, and students did have fun and gained on her class. Besides, teaching methods like role play, continuing sentences in a logical order are ideal and practical techniques as well. And, what’s more, music plays a crucial role humans lives, smooth music particularly baroque style helps learners feel at ease according to the research. Key four Asking for the feelings of the students on certain topics, in this way, teachers get the feedback immediately. And encourage students to decorate the classroom for particular activities, as it is a ideal way to strengthen the procedural memories and the emotional memories. Meanwhile, provides them with alternatives in the learning process. Key five Keep the students’ curiosity. Most children focusing time is their age plus 2 minutes. The adult is 15 to 20 minutes. First, the new stuffs and emotional stimuli arouse the attention; second, research showed that the available neural transmitters are activate more easily in the morning than in the afternoon; third, if student are mindless, teachers can stimulate him by saying “watch carefully”, then certain structure in his brain will disrupt the other stimuli that was working, in this way, he will again pay attention to the class. Water and more food with protein like eggs, fish are helpful, but avoid to eat more food with carbohydrate like snacks. The protein makes people awake. Besides, 80% of brain is made up of water, which consolidates the connections between neurons. However, sugar makes people sleepy. These tips are important factors for an excellent teacher. 5.2 Limitations Frankly speaking, this thesis is based on the limited materials because the researches on memory and vocabulary acquisition are quite rare, and some ideas or data cannot be tested precisely, just like the scientific experiments in math or biology. Mistakes and imprecise data are inevitable. Take mind-mapping as an example, though previous collected materials showed that it was an effective method for vocabulary acquisition, the subjects were limited, besides, this sort of method did not introduced to other classes. Thus, it is a question should be taken into consideration. And, the instruments were limited, few of them like questionnaires, interviews were used to evaluate the efficiency for the application of the mind-mapping. The variety of mind-mapping drawn by every student made it harder to justify which one was better, and that was the point the author was seeking for. The experimental results were unilateral because the limitation of time, the materials were just collected from one semester, but it would be doubtful whether the latter result would remain the same. Hopefully, the evaluation for mind-mapping turned out to be more scientific. Technically, it is necessary for students but for teachers to know related theories of cognitive neuronscience. In western countries, they are considered to be the basic teaching techniques for every teacher, like the teaching psychology in our country. Students majored in English teaching, should leave something valuable for the further study in this field, of course, if someone thinks it is. During the study on this field, there has always been a voice calling that perseverance can achieve everything. When someone said that it was a tough nut to crack, the only driving force was that the author knew what she wanted, and what she was sticking to. 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