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Stacey L. Pavelko; Robert E. Owens Jr.; Debbie L. Hahs-Vaughn – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2025
Purpose: Many state standards for elementary students require them to use complex syntax, and research has documented age-related increases in the production of complex utterances in elementary-aged school children. Speech-language pathologists who provide services for these children, however, need detailed information in order to plan curriculum…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Syntax, Language Skills, Language Usage
Pezzelle, Sandro; Fernández, Raquel – Cognitive Science, 2023
When communicating, people adapt their linguistic representations to those of their interlocutors. Previous studies have shown that this also occurs at the semantic level for vague and context-dependent terms such as quantifiers and uncertainty expressions. However, work to date has mostly focused on passive exposure to a given speaker's…
Descriptors: Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Cognitive Processes, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Adrian Staub – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
A substantial quantity of research has explored whether readers' eye movements are sensitive to the distinction between function and content words. No clear answer has emerged, in part due to the difficulty of accounting for differences in length, frequency, and predictability between the words in the two classes. Based on evidence that readers…
Descriptors: College Students, Universities, Eye Movements, Reading Comprehension
Chao Sun; Ye Tian; Richard Breheny – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
The phenomenon of scalar diversity refers to the well-replicated finding that different scalar expressions give rise to scalar implicatures (SIs) at different rates. Previous work has shown that part of the scalar diversity effect can be explained by theoretically motivated factors. Although the effect has been established only in controlled…
Descriptors: Pragmatics, Language Usage, Social Media, Form Classes (Languages)
Yanxin Zhu; Theres Grüter – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2024
This study investigated whether structural priming, as a reflection of error-driven learning mechanisms, could facilitate second language (L2) learning of the dative alternation in Mandarin. We sought evidence of learning from both priming and acceptability judgment data. Participants were 25 native speakers and 41 classroom learners (CLs). After…
Descriptors: Mandarin Chinese, Second Language Learning, Priming, Form Classes (Languages)
Kimberley Bell; Silke Brandt; Elena Lieven; Anna Theakston – Journal of Child Language, 2024
The English modal system is complex, exhibiting many-to-one, and one-to-many, form-function mappings. Usage-based approaches emphasise the role of the input in acquisition but rarely address the impact of form-function mappings on acquisition. To test whether consistent form-function mappings facilitate acquisition, we analysed two dense…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, English, Verbs, Linguistic Input
Lepic, Ryan – Sign Language Studies, 2023
In many descriptions of American Sign Language (ASL), signs like [breakfast] are identified as "compounds." These signs were once formed with two separate signs but have since fused into a single unit. This article presents an alternative definition of "compound" that includes both functional and formal properties. Following…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Naming, Vocabulary, Form Classes (Languages)
Janneth Trejo-Quintana; Guadalupe Elizabeth Morales-Martinez; Betsabe Hernandez-Alvarez – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2025
This research explored the mental representation of media and digital literacy (MDL) in 242 Mexican high school students through a definitional task based on the natural semantic networks technique. The participants defined ten target concepts related to MDL, using verbs, nouns, and adjectives as definers, and then they rated each definer with a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Students, Digital Literacy, Media Literacy
Charlène Gilbert – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Research in first-language (L1) sentence processing has found evidence that language comprehenders use binding condition A as a filter to rule out noun phrases that are binding-inaccessible before proceeding with the task of finding the correct antecedent. Sturt (2013) notes that this strategy does not appear to apply to advanced speakers of…
Descriptors: French, Native Language, Language Research, English (Second Language)
Anastasia Kobzeva; Dave Kush – Cognitive Science, 2024
Filler-gap dependency resolution is often characterized as an active process. We probed the mechanisms that determine where and why comprehenders posit gaps during incremental processing using Norwegian as our test language. First, we investigated why active filler-gap dependency resolution is suspended inside "island" domains like…
Descriptors: Grammar, Expectation, Norwegian, Form Classes (Languages)
Andrea D. Warner-Czyz; Sean R. Anderson; Sarah Graham; Kristin Uhler – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2024
This study investigated the acquisition of early expressive vocabulary among young children who are deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH; n = 68) using auditory technology (hearing aids and cochlear implants). Parents completed a standardized vocabulary checklist, which allowed analyses of (i) the size of their child's spoken vocabulary; (ii) composition…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Assistive Technology
Simovic, Tiana V.; Chambers, Craig G. – Cognitive Science, 2023
Pronoun interpretation is often described as relying on a comprehender's mental model of discourse. For example, in some psycholinguistic accounts, interpreting pronouns involves a process of "retrieval," whereby a pronoun is resolved by accessing information from its linguistic antecedent. However, linguistic antecedents are neither…
Descriptors: Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Eye Movements, Psycholinguistics
Hwang, Heeju – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
Much research in the functional linguistics literature suggests that the use of zero pronouns is driven by the degree of interclausal connection. Kim (1990, 1992) claims that in clause chain languages such as Korean and Japanese, zero pronouns are primarily used following an interclausal connective with a tight interclausal connection that…
Descriptors: Korean, Phrase Structure, Sentence Structure, Form Classes (Languages)
Yuning Cao – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The current dissertation investigates factors that influence usages of Japanese honorifics and explores how instructors can introduce honorifics more effectively to second-language learners. Apart from existing literature, my data includes a corpus of real-life usages of Modern Japanese, classroom observations, interviews with Japanese language…
Descriptors: Japanese, Second Language Learning, Language Teachers, Form Classes (Languages)
Gregory D. Keating – Language Learning, 2025
For Spanish nouns, masculine gender is unmarked and feminine is marked. Effects of markedness on gender agreement processing are inconsistent, possibly owing to differences between online methods. This study presents a reanalysis of eye-tracking data from Keating's (2022) study on the processing of noun-adjective gender agreement in speakers of…
Descriptors: Spanish, Morphology (Languages), Form Classes (Languages), Native Language

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