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Gordon, John – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2010
This article considers an exchange between pupils in response to heard poetry, approaching it through a "conversation analytic mentality" informed by the theories of Basil Bernstein. Using his terms, it describes an existing "pedagogic device" of poetry study for schools, to which responses under discussion do not easily…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poetry, Language Arts, Class Activities
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Coltheart, Max; Tree, Jeremy J.; Saunders, Steven J. – Psychological Review, 2010
The current authors reply to a response by Woollams, Lambon Ralph, Plaut, and Patterson on a comment by the current authors on the original article. The current authors list their agreements and disagreements with Woollams, Lambon Ralph, Plaut, and Patterson's response on the topics of the human reading system, cognitive architecture, experimental…
Descriptors: Dementia, Semantics, Cognitive Science, Neurological Organization
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Woollams, Anna M.; Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.; Plaut, David C.; Patterson, Karalyn – Psychological Review, 2010
The current authors reply to a postscript by Coltheart, Tree, and Saunders which was in response to the current authors response on a comment by the current authors on the original article. The current authors begin by responding to the final challenge posed by Coltheart, Tree, and Saunders (2010). They believe that both experimental and…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Simulation
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Brainerd, C. J.; Holliday, R. E.; Reyna, V. F.; Yang, Y.; Toglia, M. P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
Do the emotional valence and arousal of events distort children's memories? Do valence and arousal modulate counterintuitive age increases in false memory? We investigated those questions in children, adolescents, and adults using the Cornell/Cortland Emotion Lists, a word list pool that induces false memories and in which valence and arousal can…
Descriptors: Semantics, Word Lists, Memory, Experimental Psychology
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Wang, Xin; Forster, Kenneth I. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2010
Four experiments are reported which were designed to test hypotheses concerning the asymmetry of masked translation priming. Experiment 1 confirmed the presence of L2-L1 priming with a semantic categorization task and demonstrated that this effect was restricted to exemplars. Experiment 2 showed that the translation priming effect was not due to…
Descriptors: Semantics, Translation, Classification, Hypothesis Testing
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Kaplan, Jennifer; Fisher, Diane G.; Rogness, Neal T. – Journal of Statistics Education, 2010
Language plays a crucial role in the classroom. The use of specialized language in a domain can cause a subject to seem more difficult to students than it actually is. When words that are part of everyday English are used differently in a domain, these words are said to have lexical ambiguity. Studies in other fields, such as mathematics and…
Descriptors: Statistics, Mathematics Instruction, Language Usage, Jargon
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Kemmerer, David; Gonzalez-Castillo, Javier – Brain and Language, 2010
Verbs have two separate levels of meaning. One level reflects the uniqueness of every verb and is called the "root". The other level consists of a more austere representation that is shared by all the verbs in a given class and is called the "event structure template". We explore the following hypotheses about how, with specific reference to the…
Descriptors: Semantics, Verbs, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Schemata (Cognition)
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Nielson, Kristy A.; Seidenberg, Michael; Woodard, John L.; Durgerian, Sally; Zhang, Qi; Gross, William L.; Gander, Amelia; Guidotti, Leslie M.; Antuono, Piero; Rao, Stephen M. – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Person recognition can be accomplished through several modalities (face, name, voice). Lesion, neurophysiology and neuroimaging studies have been conducted in an attempt to determine the similarities and differences in the neural networks associated with person identity via different modality inputs. The current study used event-related…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Stimuli, Semantics, Cognitive Processes
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Kranjec, Alexander; Cardillo, Eileen R.; Schmidt, Gwenda L.; Chatterjee, Anjan – Cognition, 2010
Prepositions combine with nouns flexibly when describing concrete locative relations (e.g. "at/on/in" the school) but are rigidly prescribed when paired with abstract concepts (e.g. "at" risk; "on" Wednesday; "in" trouble). In the former case they do linguistic work based on their discrete semantic qualities, and in the latter they appear to serve…
Descriptors: Semantics, Nouns, Time, Spatial Ability
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Wang, Zhenying – English Language Teaching, 2009
What and how we translate are questions often argued about. No matter what kind of answers one may give, priority in translation should be granted to meaning, especially those meanings that exist in all concerned languages. In this paper the author defines them as universal sememes, and the study of them as universal semantics, of which…
Descriptors: Translation, Semantics, Sociolinguistics, Language Universals
Gordon, David A. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Against a background of disagreement about what sorts of things linguistic contents are, many philosophers of language share the assumption that they're cut only as finely as the conditions under which they are true. This includes many theorists who would reject the program known as "truth-conditional semantics". I argue that this point of…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Philosophy, Language, Semantics
Liebesman, David – ProQuest LLC, 2009
I articulate and defend a necessary and sufficient condition for an occurrence of a term to function semantically as a predicate. The condition is that the term occurrence stands in the relation of "ascription" to its denotation, ascription being a fundamental semantic relation that differs from reference. This view on predication has dramatically…
Descriptors: Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Sentence Structure, Linguistics
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Fuster, Joaquin M. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Converging evidence from humans and nonhuman primates is obliging us to abandon conventional models in favor of a radically different, distributed-network paradigm of cortical memory. Central to the new paradigm is the concept of memory network or cognit--that is, a memory or an item of knowledge defined by a pattern of connections between neuron…
Descriptors: Neurological Organization, Memory, Models, Semantics
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Fletcher-Watson, S.; Collis, J. M.; Findlay, J. M.; Leekam, S. R. – Developmental Science, 2009
Change blindness describes the surprising difficulty of detecting large changes in visual scenes when changes occur during a visual disruption. In order to study the developmental course of this phenomenon, a modified version of the flicker paradigm, based on Rensink, O'Regan & Clark (1997), was given to three groups of children aged 6-12 years…
Descriptors: Blindness, Models, Semantics, Visual Perception
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Nilsen, Don L. F.; Nilsen, Alleen Pace – English Journal, 2009
"Trope" comes from a Greek word meaning "turn." In the rhetorical sense, a trope refers to a "turn" in the way that words are being used to communicate something more than--or different from--a literal or straightforward message. Tropes are part of "deep structure" meanings and include such rhetorical devices as allegories, allusions, euphemisms,…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Figurative Language, Semantics, Surface Structure
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