Frontiers in Psychology (Jan 2024)

An empirical study on the development of metaphorical comprehension of Chinese children

  • Lulu Cheng,
  • Lulu Cheng,
  • Yingming Guan,
  • Ting Zhang,
  • Linlin Zhan,
  • Yanqin Liu,
  • Peng Wang,
  • Peng Wang,
  • Shanshan Yu,
  • Yule Peng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1254129
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Metaphor affects how people focus, remember, and process information and significantly influences children’s language development. The study explored metaphorical comprehension by Chinese children of different ages (5–8 years). We collected response times and accuracy rates when they processed metaphorical and literal sentences with the graded salience. Linear mixed-effects modeling showed that Chinese children’s metaphorical ability improved with age. Subsequent analysis found that the perception period of metaphorical knowledge was at age 5, the development stage of metaphorical knowledge was at age 6 and 7, and the rational decision period of metaphorical ability was at age 8. After 8-year-old, children can invoke the knowledge of the intention schema while activating the source domain, and this knowledge can be automatically and quickly mapped to the target domain. Meanwhile, language development and cognitive processing influenced the metaphorical comprehension of Chinese children, especially children of 8 years of age who had the highest correct rate and the shortest reaction time to process low-saliency metaphorical sentences, while 5-year-old children had the highest accuracy in high-saliency metaphorical sentence and 6-year-old children got the longest reaction time to process sentence in high-saliency metaphor. This study may provide evidence for improving and training metaphor comprehension in children with special needs such as those with an autism spectrum disorder.

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