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Peer reviewedClark, 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
Peer reviewedSinger, Murray; Harkness, Dana; Stewart, Susan T. – Discourse Processes, 1997
Concludes that, whereas inference processing may be impeded by the relative lack of familiarity of the content of expository text, it is not strictly precluded. Indicates rather that inference processing in the comprehension of expository text is regulated by the information-processing constraints of the reading task and by the discourse and…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Inferences, Language Processing
Peer reviewedCook, Anne E.; Halleran, Jennifer G.; O'Brien, Edward J. – Discourse Processes, 1998
Tests two views of how relevant global information becomes readily available to readers. Demonstrates that backgrounded information became readily available if it shared features in common with the current contents of working memory. Shows that this occurred independently of whether the information was relevant or thematically related;…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Processing, Memory, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedWray, Alison; Perkins, Michael R. – Language & Communication, 2000
Proposes a model to account for the uses to which the individual puts formulaic language, and specifically, what determines the choice for that person of a holistic or analytic processing strategy at any given moment. Formulaic language is used to describe a phenomenon that encompasses various types of wordstrings that appear to be stored and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Interaction, Language Processing, Memory
Peer reviewedPing, Alvin Leong – Language Sciences, 2000
The Hallidayan notions of theme and rheme pose an interesting challenge to linguists in their attempts to pin them down more specifically. Argues that, because the thematic structure of the clause organizes itself as a message, a useful starting point in theme/rheme research is an understanding of how clausal messages are typically processed by…
Descriptors: Inferences, Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedMeng, Michael; Bader, Markus – Language and Speech, 2000
Results of three experiments are reported that investigated the processing of locally ambiguous object-subject sentences in German. The aim was to test whether the type of grammatical information that signals garden-path has an impact on how difficult it is to arrive at the correct structural assignment. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Ambiguity, German, Grammar, Language Processing
Peer reviewedBarry, Christopher; De Bastiani, Pierluigi – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1997
Reports lexical priming effects for two inconsistently spelled segments in Italian words. Finds that Italian, despite its regular orthography, is not spelled purely nonlexically. Argues that a dual-route model of spelling production can be applied to Italian. (NH)
Descriptors: Italian, Language Processing, Models, Orthographic Symbols
Peer reviewedChan, Samuel W. K. – Journal of Information Science, 2000
Discusses natural language processing and proposes a novel approach to automatic text segmentation using heterogeneous linguistic knowledge and cluster algorithms. Represents the diversity of textual relations in a discourse network in order to analyze the linguistic bonds and determine the degree of coherence that a text may exhibit. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Algorithms, Coherence, Information Retrieval, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedBernsen, Niels Ole; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1996
Presents principles of dialog cooperativity derived from a corpus of task-oriented spoken human-machine dialog. Analyzes the "corpus" to produce a set of dialog design principles intended to prevent users from having to initiate clarification and repair metacommunication that the system would not understand. Proposes a "more…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Discourse Analysis, Language Processing, Man Machine Systems
Peer reviewedReichle, Erik D.; Carpenter, Patricia A.; Just, Marcel Adam – Cognitive Psychology, 2000
Used Magnetic Resonance Imaging to examine the relation between cognitive skill and the cortical activation engendered by linguistic or visual-spatial strategies in a sentence-picture task. Results with 12 adults indicate that language and visual-spatial processing are supported by partially separable networks of cortical regions and suggests the…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Tests, Language Processing, Skill Development
Peer reviewedTan, Chade-Meng; Wang, Yuan-Fang; Lee, Chan-Do – Information Processing & Management, 2002
Presents an efficient text categorization (or text classification) algorithm for document retrieval of natural language texts that generates bigrams (two-word phrases) and uses the information gain metric, combined with various frequency thresholds. Experimental results suggest that the bigrams can substantially raise the quality of feature sets.…
Descriptors: Algorithms, Classification, Information Retrieval, Natural Language Processing
Peer reviewedSchilling-Estes, Natalie – Journal of Sociolinguistics, 2002
Investigated two historically isolated communities in the United States--Smith Island, Maryland and the Lumbee Native American community in Robeson County, North Carolina. Demonstrates that contrary to assumption, isolated communities may be linguistically innovative and heterogeneous. Explanations for this are found to be both cognitive and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Diachronic Linguistics, Language Processing, Language Variation
Peer reviewedSmith, Donald G. – English Journal, 1999
Presents 10 specific reasons in response to a student's question "Why should we read literature?" Answers the question from 10 angles: escape, empathy, mirror, time machine, cultural heritage, language, art, "lifesaver,""reading of life," and fear of change. (NH)
Descriptors: Language Processing, Literature, Literature Appreciation, Reading Motivation
Peer reviewedStorkel, Holly L. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
Recent research suggests that phonotactic probability (the likelihood of occurrence of a sound sequence) and neighborhood density (the number of words phonologically similar to a given word) influence spoken language processing and acquisition across the lifespan in both normal and clinical populations. The majority of research in this area has…
Descriptors: Probability, Language Processing, Speech, Oral Language
Cumming, T. B.; Graham, K. S.; Patterson, K. – Brain and Language, 2006
Evidence from neurologically normal subjects suggests that repetition priming (RP) is independent of semantic processing. Therefore, we may expect patients with a selective deficit to conceptual knowledge to exhibit RP for words regardless of the integrity of their semantic representations. We tested six patients with semantic dementia (SD) on a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Language Processing, Dementia, Patients

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