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Discourse Processes | 25 |
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Journal Articles | 25 |
Reports - Research | 23 |
Information Analyses | 2 |
Speeches/Meeting Papers | 1 |
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McGlone, Matthew S.; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1994
Proposes an alternative model of language comprehension regarding how people understand idioms in which literal meanings are systematically used to constrain the use and variation of conventional idioms and to generate novel idiom variance. Presents three experiments on how people process variant idioms. (SR)
Descriptors: Comprehension, Higher Education, Idioms, Language Processing

Clark, Herbert H. – Discourse Processes, 1997
Describes 11 common dogmas of understanding (convictions that are impervious to evidence) that have led researchers to ignore or dismiss many features of everyday language. Discusses evidence against them, and some of the dangers they pose for the study of understanding. Argues that using language is fundamentally social, and that social features…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Language Research, Research Problems, Social Influences

Murphy, Gregory L. – Discourse Processes, 1992
Investigates the degree to which listeners are sensitive to the social relations expressed in choice of a name when referring to a third person during a conversation. Concludes that the social information inherent in names is picked up by readers and encoded into memory. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Processing, Language Research

Spooren, Wilbert – Discourse Processes, 1997
Analyzes different strategies used by speakers/writers and hearers/readers to deal with underspecified coherence relations, phrased in terms of Horn's (1984) Q- and R- principle. Presents data from the psycholinguistic literature on the interpretation of underspecified relations and data from language-acquisition research suggesting that both…
Descriptors: Coherence, Discourse Analysis, Language Acquisition, Language Processing

Lauer, Thomas W.; Peacock, Eileen – Discourse Processes, 1990
Provides a definition of comparison questions and shows how they relate to the semantic categories of two taxonomies for classifying questions, both of which omit comparison questions. Examines the comparison questions that auditors generate when they diagnose problems in a company. (SR)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Psychology, Communication Research, Discourse Analysis

Morrow, Daniel G. – Discourse Processes, 1990
Explores the importance of grammatical morphemes for constructing spatially organized situation models, especially how readers infer location in spatial models from prepositions and verb-aspect markers. Shows that grammatical units are as important as lexical units for guiding the construction of situation models during comprehension. (SR)
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Language Processing, Language Research

Noordman, Leo G. M.; Vonk, Wietske – Discourse Processes, 1998
Focuses on the role of cognitive structures in the reader's knowledge. Argues that causality is an important category in structuring human knowledge and that this property has consequences for text processing. Discusses research illustrating that the more the information in the text reflects causal categories, the more easily the information is…
Descriptors: Knowledge Representation, Language Processing, Language Research, Memory

Bestgen, Yves; Vonk, Wietske – Discourse Processes, 1995
Finds that temporal markers modify the availability of preceding words: segmentation markers like "around two o'clock" and "then" reduce this availability, whereas continuity markers like "and" improve this availability. Supports the hypothesis that segmentation markers lead readers not to integrate new information…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Patterns

Keysar, Boaz – Discourse Processes, 1997
Proposes the subsuming theory criterion for experiments on common ground in mutual knowledge (i.e., the design must keep common information constant and only vary whether or not it is common). Demonstrates how doing so makes stronger claims. Illustrates how experiments can be designed to satisfy the criterion by evaluating some earlier studies…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Processing, Language Research

Graesser, Arthur C.; Franklin, Stanley P. – Discourse Processes, 1990
Describes the seven main components of QUEST, a cognitive model of question answering that attempts to simulate the answers adults produce when they answer different types of questions, both closed class and open class. Illustrates how the model could be applied to different types of knowledge structures, including causal networks, goal…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Language Processing

Golding, Jonathan M.; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1990
Tests the QUEST model of question answering in two experiments. Examines which components of QUEST could predict good answers to why-questions and how-questions in the context of short stories. Supports the validity of arc-search procedures and structural distance for both question categories. Finds only partial support for number of information…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Language Processing

Graesser, Arthur C.; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1990
Tests the QUEST model of question answering in naturalistic settings and in settings with complex pragmatic constraints: telephone surveys, business interactions, filmed interviews, and interviews on popular television programs. Finds that QUEST explains most of the answers in these contexts and virtually all of the answers that refer to the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Language Processing

Keysar, Boaz – Discourse Processes, 1994
Supports the hypothesis that literal and metaphorical interpretations can result from similar contextual constraints. Finds that a metaphorical interpretation may be selected because a literal interpretation would have been inappropriate and that likewise a literal interpretation may be selected because a metaphorical interpretation would have…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Context Effect, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education

O'Brien, Edward J.; Raney, Gary E.; Albrecht, Jason E.; Rayner, Keith – Discourse Processes, 1997
Finds that explicit anaphors only reactivated undergraduate students' target antecedents when they are both lexically and conceptually identical to a target antecedent; but as distance between an anaphor and its antecedent increased, even an explicit anaphor did not reactivate a target antecedent. Shows that distant antecedents were reactivated…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Processing, Language Research

Newman, Jean E. – Discourse Processes, 1985
Describes three experiments that explored the informational roles of emphasis and word order in active sentences. The results, when considered together, strongly implicate recentness, but not emphasis, as an important means of linking temporally contiguous sentences. (HTH)
Descriptors: Coherence, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Processing
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