Abstract

Millions of people worldwide are taking up foreign languages with logographic writing systems, such as Japanese or Chinese. Learning thousands of characters necessary for literacy in those languages is a unique challenge to those coming from alphabetic backgrounds, and sustaining motivation in the face of such a momentous task is a struggle for many students. Many games exist for this purpose, but few offer production memory practice such as writing, and the vast majority are thinly veiled flashcards. To address this gap, we created Radical Tunes—a musical kanji-writing game—which combines production practice with musical mnemonic by assigning a melody to each element of a character. We chose to utilize music as it is a powerful tool that can be employed to enhance learning and memory. In this article, we explore whether incorporating melodies into a kanji learning game can positively affect the memorization of the stroke order/direction and overall shape of several Japanese characters, similar to the mnemonic effect of adding music to text. Specifically, we conducted two experimental studies, finding that (1) music improved immersion—an important factor related to learning; and (2) there was a positive correlation between melody presence and character production, particularly for more complex characters.

Highlights

  • The results revealed a significant difference in favor of the musical version of Radical Tunes, with increased overall Immersive Experience Questionnaire (IEQ) scores (p = 0.040, r = 0.41), cognitive involvement (p = 0.026, r = 0.44), and emotional involvement (p = 0.034, r = 0.42)

  • The first study showed that the music condition of Radical Tunes significantly increased the overall IEQ scores, cognitive involvement and emotional involvement, though no significant differences were found for real-world dissociation, challenge or control

  • We described Radical Tunes—a musical game for learning to write

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Summary

Introduction

1/6 of Earth’s population learn languages with logographic writing systems (LWSs) such as Chinese, Japanese and Korean as their native tongues [1]

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