How adults’ experience with words changes over time: Insights from five years of the Wesleyan Word Experience Project
Barbara J. Juhasz, Grace Devanny, Abby Frankenberg, Ava Galdenzi, Lumen Constance Hirwa, Wiralpach Nawabutsitthirat, Meiwen Shao

TL;DR
This study tracked how adults' word experiences change over time using student ratings collected over five years.
Contribution
The study identified 63 words that showed experience-based lexical change in AoA and familiarity ratings over five years.
Findings
63 words showed experience-based lexical change in age-of-acquisition and familiarity ratings.
Age-of-acquisition and familiarity ratings showed strong correlations over time.
Age-of-acquisition ratings demonstrated high interrater reliability across five years.
Abstract
This study explored how adults’ experiences with words may change over time. Ratings of age-of-acquisition (AoA) and familiarity were collected on 499 words from introductory psychology students each semester, for a total of 5 years. Over the course of ten semesters, ratings were collected from more than 1000 students. One goal of this multi-year project was to explore whether it is possible to assess lexical change for particular words. Regression analyses were used to track the trajectory of the words. Based on the analyses, words were categorized into three different groups: words that remain consistent in AoA and familiarity, those with upward trajectories, and those with downward trajectories. A total of 63 words were identified as undergoing experience-based lexical change. The project also explored how AoA and familiarity relate to each other over time as well as each variable’s…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReading and Literacy Development · Educational Strategies and Epistemologies · Child and Animal Learning Development
