Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 0 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 1 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 3 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 13 |
Descriptor
Comprehension | 16 |
Figurative Language | 16 |
Language Processing | 9 |
Cognitive Processes | 5 |
Semantics | 4 |
Age Differences | 3 |
Context Effect | 3 |
Sentences | 3 |
Children | 2 |
Eye Movements | 2 |
Form Classes (Languages) | 2 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Chambers, Craig G. | 2 |
Graham, Susan A. | 2 |
Astington, Janet Wilde | 1 |
Bader, Markus | 1 |
Berman, Jared M. J. | 1 |
Colombo, Maria Rosa | 1 |
Crane, Richard D. | 1 |
Filippova, Eva | 1 |
Gildea, Patricia | 1 |
Glucksberg, Sam | 1 |
Hare, Mary | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Reports - Evaluative | 16 |
Journal Articles | 15 |
Education Level
Early Childhood Education | 1 |
Elementary Education | 1 |
Higher Education | 1 |
Postsecondary Education | 1 |
Preschool Education | 1 |
Audience
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Huft, Justin – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Framing as a metacommunicative device establishes the narrative of a given story and mobilizes emotional support. Within the framework of monster theory, horror movies are seen as a way of framing common fears about moral decay, concerns about the future, anxiety about outgroup members, and spiritual unknowns. In the classroom, we explore the…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Communication (Thought Transfer), Narration, Social Attitudes
Madsen, Mathias W. – Cognitive Science, 2016
One of the core tenets of cognitive metaphor theory is the claim that metaphors ground abstract knowledge in concrete, first-hand experience. In this paper, I argue that this grounding hypothesis contains some problematic conceptual ambiguities and, under many reasonable interpretations, empirical difficulties. I present evidence that there are…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Figurative Language, Language Processing, Comprehension
Crane, Richard D. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2016
Teaching theology within academic institutions with confessional commitments and theologically conservative students requires holding together, in creative tension, two pedagogical goals. The challenge is to promote rigorous academic inquiry by encouraging student openness to engagement with perspectives that challenge their own beliefs while…
Descriptors: Theological Education, Introductory Courses, Models, Traditionalism
Rojo, Ana – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2015
Translation has long played a role in linguistic and literary studies research. More recently, the theoretical and methodological concerns of process research have given translation an additional role in cognitive science. The interest in the cognitive aspects of translation has led scholars to turn to disciplines such as cognitive linguistics,…
Descriptors: Translation, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Science, Language Processing
Rodd, Jennifer M.; Longe, Olivia A.; Randall, Billi; Tyler, Lorraine K. – Neuropsychologia, 2010
Spoken language comprehension is known to involve a large left-dominant network of fronto-temporal brain regions, but there is still little consensus about how the syntactic and semantic aspects of language are processed within this network. In an fMRI study, volunteers heard spoken sentences that contained either syntactic or semantic ambiguities…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Sentences, Speech, Semantics
Hsieh, Shelley Ching-Yu; Hsu, Chun-Chieh Natalie – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2010
This study examines the effect of familiarity, context, and linguistic convention on idiom comprehension in Mandarin speaking children. Two experiments (a comprehension task followed by a comprehension task coupled with a metapragmatic task) were administered to test participants in three age groups (6 and 9-year-olds, and an adult control group).…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Language Patterns, Speech Communication, Metalinguistics
Bader, Markus; Haussler, Jana – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
This paper investigates how readers process number ambiguous noun phrases in subject position. A speeded-grammaticality judgment experiment and two self-paced reading experiments were conducted involving number ambiguous subjects in German verb-end clauses. Number preferences for individual nouns were estimated by means of two questionnaire…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Sentences, Verbs, Nouns
Berman, Jared M. J.; Chambers, Craig G.; Graham, Susan A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
An eye tracking methodology was used to evaluate 3- and 4-year-old children's sensitivity to speaker affect when resolving referential ambiguity. Children were presented with pictures of three objects on a screen (including two referents of the same kind, e.g., an intact doll and a broken doll, and one distracter item), paired with a prerecorded…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Form Classes (Languages), Figurative Language, Human Body
Levy, Roger – Cognition, 2008
This paper investigates the role of resource allocation as a source of processing difficulty in human sentence comprehension. The paper proposes a simple information-theoretic characterization of processing difficulty as the work incurred by resource reallocation during parallel, incremental, probabilistic disambiguation in sentence comprehension,…
Descriptors: Expectation, Sentences, Figurative Language, Language Processing
Filippova, Eva; Astington, Janet Wilde – Child Development, 2008
This study describes the development of social reasoning in school-age children. An irony task is used to assess 5-, 7-, and 9-year-olds' (N = 72) and adults' (N = 24) recursive understanding of others' minds. Guttman scale analysis demonstrates that in order to understand a speaker's communicative intention, a child needs to recognize the…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Language Aptitude, Cognitive Development, Social Cognition
Kilickaya, Ferit – Online Submission, 2007
In the paper the lexical ambiguity resolution is presented. The paper is specifically focused on the processing of words, models of word recognition, context effect, trying to find an answer to how the reader-listener determines the contextually appropriate meaning of a word. Ambiguity resolution is analyzed and explored in two perspectives: the…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Figurative Language, Word Recognition, Context Effect
Nilsen, Elizabeth S.; Graham, Susan A.; Smith, Shannon; Chambers, Craig G. – Developmental Science, 2008
Four-year-olds were asked to assess an adult listener's knowledge of the location of a hidden sticker after the listener was provided an ambiguous or unambiguous description of the sticker location. When preschoolers possessed private knowledge about the sticker location, the location they chose indicated that they judged a description to be…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Linguistics, Figurative Language, Preschool Children
Hare, Mary; Tanenhaus, Michael K.; McRae, Ken – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
Two rating studies demonstrate that English speakers willingly produce reduced relatives with internal cause verbs (e.g., "Whisky fermented in oak barrels can have a woody taste"), and judge their acceptability based on factors known to influence ambiguity resolution, rather than on the internal/external cause distinction. Regression analyses…
Descriptors: Verbs, Figurative Language, Comprehension, Phrase Structure
Gildea, Patricia; Glucksberg, Sam – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1983
The question of what constitutes a minimal appropriate context for understanding a metaphor is examined through the relative effectiveness of three types of contextual priming for metaphor comprehension. All three produced immediate and automatic metaphor comprehension. The use of context to disambiguate both literal and nonliteral speech messages…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Comprehension, Concept Formation
Papagno, Costanza; Tabossi, Patrizia; Colombo, Maria Rosa; Zampetti, Patrizia – Brain and Language, 2004
Idiom comprehension was assessed in 10 aphasic patients with semantic deficits by means of a string-to-picture matching task. Patients were also submitted to an oral explanation of the same idioms, and to a word comprehension task. The stimuli of this last task were the words following the verb in the idioms. Idiom comprehension was severely…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Semantics, Aphasia, Oral Language
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1 | 2