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Hessler, Dorte; Jonkers, Roel; Bastiaanse, Roelien – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2010
Individuals with aphasia have more problems detecting small differences between speech sounds than larger ones. This paper reports how phonemic processing is impaired and how this is influenced by speechreading. A non-word discrimination task was carried out with "audiovisual", "auditory only" and "visual only" stimulus display. Subjects had to…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Phonetics, Aphasia, Task Analysis
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Faroqi-Shah, Yasmeen; Thompson, Cynthia K. – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2010
There are several accounts of why some individuals with post-stroke aphasia experience difficulty in producing morphologically complex verbs. Although a majority of these individuals also produce syntactically flawed utterances, at least two accounts focus on word-level encoding operations. One account proposes a difficulty with rule-governed…
Descriptors: Verbs, Aphasia, Morphology (Languages), Neurological Impairments
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Hunt, Ruskin H.; Aslin, Richard N. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2010
Category formation lies at the heart of a number of higher-order behaviors, including language. We assessed the ability of human adults to learn, from distributional information alone, categories embedded in a sequence of input stimuli using a serial reaction time task. Artificial grammars generated corpora of input strings containing a…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Logical Thinking, Novels, Cognitive Development
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Wagner, Laura – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2010
This paper investigated children's ability to use syntactic structures to infer semantic information. The particular syntax-semantics link examined was the one between transitivity (transitive/intransitive structures) and telicity (telic/atelic perspectives; that is, boundedness). Although transitivity is an important syntactic reflex of telicity,…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Semantics, Syntax, Inferences
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Johnson, Elizabeth K.; Tyler, Michael D. – Developmental Science, 2010
Past research has demonstrated that infants can rapidly extract syllable distribution information from an artificial language and use this knowledge to infer likely word boundaries in speech. However, artificial languages are extremely simplified with respect to natural language. In this study, we ask whether infants' ability to track transitional…
Descriptors: Cues, Artificial Languages, Testing, Infants
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Grabowski, Joachim; Weinzierl, Christian; Schmitt, Markus – Journal of Research in Reading, 2010
Particularly in primary school, good performance on copy tasks is an important working technique. With respect to writing skills, copying is a very basic process on which more complex writing abilities are based. We studied the copying ability of second and fourth graders across four types of symbols which vary with respect to their semantic and…
Descriptors: Semantics, Grade 4, Writing Skills, Grade 2
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Haskell, Todd R.; Thornton, Robert; MacDonald, Maryellen C. – Cognition, 2010
A robust result in research on the production of grammatical agreement is that speakers are more likely to produce an erroneous verb with phrases such as "the key to the cabinets", with a singular noun followed by a plural one, than with phrases such as "the keys to the cabinet", where a plural noun is followed by a singular. These asymmetries are…
Descriptors: Nouns, Grammar, Error Patterns, Verbs
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Beharelle, Anjali Raja; Dick, Anthony Steven; Josse, Goulven; Solodkin, Ana; Huttenlocher, Peter R.; Levine, Susan C.; Small, Steven L. – Brain, 2010
A predominant theory regarding early stroke and its effect on language development, is that early left hemisphere lesions trigger compensatory processes that allow the right hemisphere to assume dominant language functions, and this is thought to underlie the near normal language development observed after early stroke. To test this theory, we…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Impairments, Language Acquisition, Children
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Nitschke, Sanjo; Kidd, Evan; Serratrice, Ludovica – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2010
The present study investigated L1 transfer effects in L2 sentence processing and syntactic priming through comprehension in speakers of German and Italian. L1 and L2 speakers of both languages participated in a syntactic priming experiment that aimed to shift their preferred interpretation of ambiguous relative clause constructions. The results…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Transfer of Training, Language Processing, Language Acquisition
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Gouvea, Ana C.; Phillips, Colin; Kazanina, Nina; Poeppel, David – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2010
The P600 is an event-related brain potential (ERP) typically associated with the processing of grammatical anomalies or incongruities. A similar response has also been observed in fully acceptable long-distance "wh"-dependencies. Such findings raise the question of whether these ERP responses reflect common underlying processes, and what…
Descriptors: Sentences, Topography, Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Processes
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Walsh, Amy; McDowall, John; Grimshaw, Gina M. – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Vulnerability to depression and non-response to Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) are associated with specific neurophysiological characteristics including greater right hemisphere (RH) relative to left hemisphere (LH) activity. The present study investigated the relationship between hemispheric specialization and processing of…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Specialization, Cognitive Processes, Depression (Psychology)
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Wayland, Ratree P.; Eckhouse, Erin; Lombardino, Linda; Roberts, Rosalyn – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2010
This study investigated the relationship between speech perception, phonological processing and reading skills among school-aged children classified as "skilled" and "less skilled" readers based on their ability to read words, decode non-words, and comprehend short passages. Three speech perception tasks involving categorization of speech continua…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Phonological Awareness, Auditory Perception, Short Term Memory
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Cappelle, Bert; Shtyrov, Yury; Pulvermuller, Friedemann – Brain and Language, 2010
There is a considerable linguistic debate on whether phrasal verbs (e.g., "turn up," "break down") are processed as two separate words connected by a syntactic rule or whether they form a single lexical unit. Moreover, views differ on whether meaning (transparency vs. opacity) plays a role in determining their syntactically-connected or lexical…
Descriptors: Phrase Structure, Verbs, Morphemes, Neurology
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Duran, Nicholas D.; Hall, Charles; McCarthy, Philip M.; McNamara, Danielle S. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2010
The words people use and the way they use them can reveal a great deal about their mental states when they attempt to deceive. The challenge for researchers is how to reliably distinguish the linguistic features that characterize these hidden states. In this study, we use a natural language processing tool called Coh-Metrix to evaluate deceptive…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Linguistics, Information Technology, Deception
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Dijkstra, Ton; Hilberink-Schulpen, Beryl; van Heuven, Walter J. B. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2010
If access to the bilingual lexicon takes place in a language independent way, monolingual repetition and masked form priming accounts should be directly applicable to bilinguals. We tested such an account (Grainger and Jacobs, 1999) and extended it to explain bilingual effects from L2 to L1. Dutch-English bilinguals made a lexical decision on a…
Descriptors: Monolingualism, Indo European Languages, Bilingualism, Priming
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