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Miller, Carol A.; Deevy, Patricia – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2006
Primary objective: To determine if structural priming can be demonstrated in young children with and without specific language impairment (SLI). Research design: A mixed-model design was used to compare children with SLI to two groups of typically developing (TD) children, and to compare priming conditions. Methods and procedures: Eighteen…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Language Acquisition, Language Impairments, Preschool Children
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Halliday, L. F.; Bishop, D. V. M. – Brain and Language, 2006
Specific reading disability (SRD) is now widely recognised as often being caused by phonological processing problems, affecting analysis of spoken as well as written language. According to one theoretical account, these phonological problems are due to low-level problems in auditory perception of dynamic acoustic cues. Evidence for this has come…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Hearing Impairments, Auditory Perception, Cues
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van Alphen, Petra M.; McQueen, James M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Effects on spoken-word recognition of prevoicing differences in Dutch initial voiced plosives were examined. In 2 cross-modal identity-priming experiments, participants heard prime words and nonwords beginning with voiced plosives with 12, 6, or 0 periods of prevoicing or matched items beginning with voiceless plosives and made lexical decisions…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Uncommonly Taught Languages, Word Recognition, Oral Language
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Tylka, Tracy L. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2006
Intuitive eating is characterized by eating based on physiological hunger and satiety cues rather than situational and emotional cues and is associated with psychological well-being. This study reports on the development and initial psychometric evaluation of the Intuitive Eating Scale (IES) with data collected in 4 studies from 1,260 college…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Cues, Intuition, Data Collection
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Berger, Carole; Donnadieu, Sophie – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
This research explores the way in which young children (5 years of age) and adults use perceptual and conceptual cues for categorizing objects processed by vision or by audition. Three experiments were carried out using forced-choice categorization tasks that allowed responses based on taxonomic relations (e.g., vehicles) or on schema category…
Descriptors: Young Children, Adults, Perception, Concept Formation
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Halliday, Lorna F.; Bishop, Dorothy V. M. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
A popular hypothesis holds that developmental dyslexia is caused by phonological processing problems and is therefore linked to difficulties in the analysis of spoken as well as written language. It has been suggested that these phonological deficits might be attributable to low-level problems in processing the temporal fine structure of auditory…
Descriptors: Written Language, Speech Communication, Cues, Comprehension
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Schneider, Darryl W.; Logan, Gordon D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
Switch costs in task switching are commonly attributed to an executive control process of task-set reconfiguration, particularly in studies involving the explicit task-cuing procedure. The authors propose an alternative account of explicitly cued performance that is based on 2 mechanisms: priming of cue encoding from residual activation of cues in…
Descriptors: Cues, Cognitive Processes, Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory
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Roediger, Henry L.; Marsh, Elizabeth J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Multiple-choice tests are commonly used in educational settings but with unknown effects on students' knowledge. The authors examined the consequences of taking a multiple-choice test on a later general knowledge test in which students were warned not to guess. A large positive testing effect was obtained: Prior testing of facts aided final…
Descriptors: Testing, Multiple Choice Tests, Guessing (Tests), Cues
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Zellner, Martina; Bauml, Karl-Heinz – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
In list-method directed forgetting, participants are cued to intentionally forget a previously studied list while remembering a subsequently presented 2nd list. Results from prior research are inconclusive on whether older adults show deficits in this type of task. In 3 experiments, the authors reexamined the issue and compared younger and older…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Older Adults, Cues, Memory
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Kimball, Jonathan W.; Kinney, Elisabeth M.; Taylor, Bridget A.; Stromer, Robert – Education & Treatment of Children, 2004
Teaching with activity schedules may yield functional skills that are not readily achieved by traditional discrete-trial teaching or by naturalistic intervention strategies. Activity schedules are unique because the procedures focus on teaching a learner to do and say things in the presence of instructional cues accessed independently rather than…
Descriptors: Cues, Autism, Pictorial Stimuli, Teaching Methods
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Sueyoshi, Ayano; Hardison, Debra M. – Language Learning, 2005
This study investigated the contribution of gestures and facial cues to second-language learners' listening comprehension of a videotaped lecture by a native speaker of English. A total of 42 low-intermediate and advanced learners of English as a second language were randomly assigned to 3 stimulus conditions: AV-gesture-face audiovisual including…
Descriptors: Cues, Listening Comprehension, Nonverbal Communication, English (Second Language)
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Rodriguez, Luis J.; Torres, M. Ines – Language and Speech, 2006
Previous works in English have revealed that disfluencies follow regular patterns and that incorporating them into the language model of a speech recognizer leads to lower perplexities and sometimes to a better performance. Although work on disfluency modeling has been applied outside the English community (e.g., in Japanese), as far as we know…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Man Machine Systems, Spanish, Behavior
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Ylinen, Sari; Shestakova, Anna; Alku, Paavo; Huotilainen, Minna – Language and Speech, 2005
Some languages, such as Finnish, use speech-sound duration as the primary cue for a phonological quantity distinction. For second-language (L2) learners, quantity is often difficult to master if speech-sound duration plays a less important role in the phonology of their native language (L1). By comparing the categorization performance of native…
Descriptors: Finno Ugric Languages, Perception, Phonology, Phonemes
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Ergorul, Ceren; Eichenbaum, Howard – Learning & Memory, 2004
Previous studies have indicated that nonhuman animals might have a capacity for episodic-like recall reflected in memory for "what" events that happened "where" and "when". These studies did not identify the brain structures that are critical to this capacity. Here we trained rats to remember single training episodes, each composed of a series of…
Descriptors: Neurology, Cues, Spatial Ability, Neurological Impairments
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MacWhinney, Brian – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2004
Truscott and Sharwood Smith (henceforth T&SS) attempt to show how second language acquisition can occur without any learning. In their APT model, change depends only on the tuning of innate principles through the normal course of processing of L2. There are some features of their model that I find attractive. Specifically, their acceptance of the…
Descriptors: Cues, Second Languages, Second Language Learning, Competition
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