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Chiappe, Penny; Chiappe, Dan L.; Gottardo, Alexandra – Educational Psychology, 2004
This study examined the interaction between speech perception and sentential context among 13 poor readers and 49 good readers in grades one to three. Children's performance was examined on tasks assessing expressive and receptive vocabulary, reading skill, phonological awareness, pseudoword repetition, and phoneme identification. Good readers…
Descriptors: Semantics, Phonological Awareness, Phonemes, Identification
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Taha, T.A. – Education, 2006
Over the centuries, English has shown a remarkable flexibility in borrowing foreign words, which has resulted in a very cosmopolitan vocabulary. This study examines some of the latest Arabic loanwords frequently used in the context of the war in Iraq. The nature of those words, their connotations, and the semantic shifts that some of them have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Semitic Languages, Student Attitudes, Semantics
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Ferre, Pilar; Sanchez-Casas, Rosa; Guasch, Marc – Language Learning, 2006
The present study investigates the developmental aspect of the revised hierarchical model (Kroll & Stewart, 1994) concerning the access to the conceptual store from the second language (L2). We manipulated the level of proficiency and age of L2 acquisition. We tested Spanish-Catalan bilinguals (49 early proficient bilinguals, 28 late proficient…
Descriptors: Language Proficiency, Second Language Learning, Semantics, Interference (Language)
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Fernandes, Keith J.; Marcus, Gary F.; Di Nubila, Jennifer A.; Vouloumanos, Athena – Cognition, 2006
An essential part of the human capacity for language is the ability to link conceptual or semantic representations with syntactic representations. On the basis of data from spontaneous production, Tomasello (2000) suggested that young children acquire such links on a verb-by-verb basis, with little in the way of a general understanding of…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Semantics, Verbs, Language Acquisition
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Dillon, Daniel G.; Cooper, Julie J.; Grent-'t-Jong, Tineke; Woldorff, Marty G.; LaBar, Kevin S. – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Event-related potential (ERP) studies have shown that emotional stimuli elicit greater amplitude late positive-polarity potentials (LPPs) than neutral stimuli. This effect has been attributed to arousal, but emotional stimuli are also more semantically coherent than uncategorized neutral stimuli. ERPs were recorded during encoding of positive,…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Semantics, Information Processing, Cognitive Processes
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Brackenbury, Tim; Pye, Clifton – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2005
Children with language impairments demonstrate a broad range of semantic difficulties, including problems with new word acquisition, storage and organization of known words, and lexical access/retrieval. Unfortunately, assessments of children's semantic skills are often limited to measures of receptive and expressive vocabulary size. As a result,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Speech Language Pathology, Language Impairments, Children
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Rankins, D.; Bradshaw, J. L.; Georgiou-Karistianis, N. – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Core symptoms of Tourette's syndrome (TS) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) may be attributed to an impairment in inhibitory control. Neuropsychological studies have addressed inhibition in both disorders, but findings have been inconsistent. The aim of this study was to examine cognitive inhibition, using a semantic Simon effect paradigm,…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Patients, Cognitive Processes, Inhibition
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Tsybina, Irina; Girolametto, Luigi E.; Weitzman, Elaine; Greenberg, Janice – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2006
This study examined linguistic recasts provided by 16 early childhood educators to preschool children learning English as a second language (EL2). Recasts are semantic and syntactic revisions of children's utterances. The educator-child interactions were filmed during book reading and play dough activities with small groups of four children, one…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Semantics
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Igo, L. Brent; Kiewra, Kenneth A.; Bruning, Roger – Journal of Experimental Education, 2004
The extant picture-learning research does not address confusing word pairs that are not concrete (e.g., in and into). In this study, university students viewed 11 timed Web pages containing information on confusing word pairs. Each page addressed one word pair and distinguished the words with examples (example group), examples and rules (rule…
Descriptors: College Students, Web Sites, Hypothesis Testing, Visual Learning
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Huettig, F.; Altmann, G.T.M. – Cognition, 2005
When participants are presented simultaneously with spoken language and a visual display depicting objects to which that language refers, participants spontaneously fixate the visual referents of the words being heard [Cooper, R. M. (1974). The control of eye fixation by the meaning of spoken language: A new methodology for the real-time…
Descriptors: Semantics, Probability, Language Processing, Human Body
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Taconnat, Laurence; Isingrini, Michel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Generation effect (generated words are better memorized than read words) of anagrams, rhymes, and associates of target words was examined in young, elderly, and very old subjects. Experiments 1 and 2 showed that only young subjects benefit from the generation effect in a free-recall test when the rule is of a phonological nature. Experiments 3, 4,…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Aging (Individuals), Cognitive Processes, Rhyme
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Berman, Ruth A.; Katzenberger, Irit – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2004
This article considers how children and young people conceptualize and construct different types of texts. The initial parts of narrative and expository texts written by grade-schoolers, adolescents, and adults were analyzed, on the assumption that the opening to a piece of discourse serves as a window on the text as a whole. Analysis was…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Semantics, Age Differences, Writing (Composition)
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Benuck, Marni B.; Peverly, Stephen T. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2004
This paper examines the relationship between orthographic depth and reliance upon context for oral reading in English and Hebrew. Research on context effects in English has indicated that the decoding ability of adequate readers is only minimally affected by context. The effect of context may be greater in Hebrew because of its deeper orthography…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Semantics, Freedom, English
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Massone, Maria Ignacia; Curiel, Monica – Sign Language Studies, 2004
This article focuses on word order - the order of constituents in the sentence - as one way in which languages establish the relationship between a verb and its arguments. The spoken languages of the world have been classified into three, major word-order types: SVO, VSO, and SOV. Greenberg' work (1963) on language typology has been a stimulus to…
Descriptors: Semantics, Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Sentence Structure, Language Research
Blackwell, Patricia L. – Zero to Three (J), 2004
This article examines whether the idea of "temperament" is a useful construct for families to understand babies' and toddlers' behavior. The author suggests that "regulatory skill" may be a more neutral term than temperament for parents and practitioners to use in discussing individual differences among babies and toddlers and suggests that…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Personality, Parents, Individual Differences
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