Publication Date
In 2025 | 8 |
Since 2024 | 20 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 62 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 136 |
Descriptor
Language Acquisition | 136 |
Short Term Memory | 73 |
Memory | 61 |
Foreign Countries | 40 |
Vocabulary Development | 32 |
Correlation | 31 |
Preschool Children | 31 |
Second Language Learning | 31 |
Children | 29 |
Phonology | 28 |
Task Analysis | 28 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Elementary Education | 19 |
Early Childhood Education | 14 |
Primary Education | 9 |
Higher Education | 5 |
Kindergarten | 5 |
Postsecondary Education | 5 |
Grade 1 | 4 |
Grade 2 | 3 |
Grade 4 | 3 |
Secondary Education | 3 |
Grade 9 | 2 |
More ▼ |
Audience
Researchers | 1 |
Students | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Carmit Altman; Nehama Shaya; Roni Berke; Esther Adi-Japha – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2025
Background: Understanding memory retention in children with developmental language disorder (DLD) compared with their typically developing (TD) peers enhances our knowledge of memory processes. Aims: To examine long-term memory consolidation of a declarative object-location task and a procedural symbol-writing task, along with grammatical and…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Memory, Retention (Psychology), Children
Gholam-Reza Parvizi; Mansoor Tavakoli; Mohammad Amiryousefi; Mohsen Rezazadeh – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
Awareness, short-term memory, and long-term memory are interrelated cognitive abilities that influence orthographic acquisition under Individual Differences. Connectionists ignore the role of biological grammar in language acquisition and consider external inputs or interventions as factors that shape abstract grammar through network mapping…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Long Term Memory, Short Term Memory, English (Second Language)
Crossing the Boundary: No Catastrophic Limits on Infants' Capacity to Represent Linguistic Sequences
Natalia Reoyo-Serrano; Anastasia Dimakou; Chiara Nascimben; Tamara Bastianello; Daniela Lucangeli; Silvia Benavides-Varela – Developmental Science, 2025
The boundary effect, namely the infants' failures to compare small and large numerosities, is well documented in studies using visual stimuli. The prevailing explanation is that the numerical system used to process sets up to 3 is incompatible with the system employed for numbers >3. This study investigates the boundary effect in 10-month-old…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Speech Communication, Language Processing
Frédéric Thériault-Couture; Célia Matte-Gagné; Annie Bernier – Developmental Science, 2025
Executive functions (EFs) emerge in the first years of life and are essential for many areas of child development. However, intraindividual developmental trajectories of EF during toddlerhood and their associations with ongoing development of language skills remain poorly understood. The present three-wave study examined these trajectories and…
Descriptors: Executive Function, Toddlers, Child Development, Language Acquisition
Gordana Colic; Neda Miloševic Dedakin; Jovana Janjic – Research in Pedagogy, 2025
Introduction: One of the fundamental abilities underlying language development is phonological working memory. In this regard, the hypothesis is that children with specific language impairments have difficulties with phonological working memory, which may limit their language development. Objective: The aim of this study is to examine phonological…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Phonological Awareness, Language Impairments, Language Acquisition
Bertram Opitz; Veit Kubik – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
Benefits of self-testing for learning have been consistently shown for simple materials such as word lists learned by rote memorization. Considerably less evidence for such benefits exists for complex, more educationally relevant materials and its application to new situations. The present study explores the mechanisms underlying this transfer. To…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Artificial Languages, Grammar, Memorization
Belia, Margherita; Keren-Portnoy, Tamar; Vihman, Marilyn – Language Learning, 2023
This systematic review surveyed research on the associations between sleep and the memory processes involved in word learning in infancy. We found only 16 studies that addressed this topic directly, identifying associations between infant sleep and the memory processes, the identification of word forms in running speech, and the stabilization and…
Descriptors: Sleep, Memory, Word Recognition, Infants
Jutta Kray; Linda Sommerfeld; Arielle Borovsky; Katja Häuser – Child Development Perspectives, 2024
Prediction error plays a pivotal role in theories of learning, including theories of language acquisition and use. Researchers have investigated whether and under which conditions children, like adults, use prediction to facilitate language comprehension at different levels of linguistic representation. However, many aspects of the reciprocal…
Descriptors: Prediction, Child Development, Language Acquisition, Error Analysis (Language)
Bradley, Joff P. N. – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
Here I shall write about the late Bernard Stiegler (1952-2020) and contextualize this important philosopher's work with respect to the concrete, everyday pedagogical issue of language learning. To demonstrate Stiegler's applicability to education studies, I shall address the issue of character amnesia ([Chinese characters omitted], tibiwangzi in…
Descriptors: Memory, Philosophy, Written Language, Language Acquisition
Tiffany L Hutchins; Sophie E. Knox; E. Cheryl Fletcher – Autism & Developmental Language Impairments, 2024
Background and Aim: Recently, there has been a lot of interest surrounding the term gestalt language processor (GLP) which is associated with Natural Language Acquisition (NLA): a protocol intended to support the language development of autistic people. In NLA, delayed echolalia is presumed raw source material that GLPs use to acquire language in…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Repetition
Manolescu, Dan – Journal of Practical Studies in Education, 2023
The present article aims to estimate the value of language learning through a quick review of the learning process and with a focus on "accumulated knowledge" and "the ability to learn." Following the opinions of researchers and linguists, we can also argue that the whole history of human culture--"of intelligence and…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Memory, Imagination, Learning Processes
Ilia V. Markov; Ksenia S. Kharitonova; Elena L. Grigorenko – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
Phonological awareness and phonological working memory are essential for successful language acquisition and development of literacy. Although this essence is language-universal, its degree varies for different languages, depending, in part, on language transparency. The current study analyzes the adapted versions of the pseudoword repetition test…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Phonological Awareness, Phonology, Language Acquisition
Lisa Bartha-Doering; Vito Giordano; Sophie Mandl; Silvia Benavides-Varela; Anna Weiskopf; Johannes Mader; Julia Andrejevic; Nadine Adrian; Lisa Emilia Ashmawy; Patrick Appel; Rainer Seidl; Stephan Doering; Angelika Berger; Johanna Alexopoulos – Developmental Science, 2025
Newborns are able to neurally discriminate between speech and nonspeech right after birth. To date it remains unknown whether this early speech discrimination and the underlying neural language network is associated with later language development. Preterm-born children are an interesting cohort to investigate this relationship, as previous…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Perception, Brain, Birth
Felix Hao Wang; Meili Luo; Nan Li – Developmental Science, 2024
In word learning, learners need to identify the referent of words by leveraging the fact that the same word may co-occur with different sets of objects. This raises the question, what do children remember from "in the moment" that they can use for cross-situational learning? Furthermore, do children represent pictures of familiar animals…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Vocabulary Development, Memory, Language Acquisition
He, Angela Xiaoxue – Infant and Child Development, 2022
In acquiring a native language, the input children receive, to an unneglectable extent, shapes the rate of acquisition and the ultimate achievement. This in turn has cascading effects on many aspects of later development, including but not limited to language. Providing optimal input for early language development, therefore, is of major interest…
Descriptors: Linguistic Input, Native Language, Language Acquisition, Memory