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Hammarberg, Bjorn – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (IRAL), 2010
Research on individual multilingualism and third language acquisition has expanded greatly in recent years. A theoretical correlate of this is the recognition of the fact that humans are potentially multilingual by nature, that multilingualism is the default state of language competence, and that this in turn has implications for an adequate…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Second Language Learning, Language Acquisition, Correlation
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Pons, Ferran; Toro, Juan M. – Cognition, 2010
Recent research has suggested consonants and vowels serve different roles during language processing. While statistical computations are preferentially made over consonants but not over vowels, simple structural generalizations are easily made over vowels but not over consonants. Nevertheless, the origins of this asymmetry are unknown. Here we…
Descriptors: Vowels, Language Tests, Infants, Language Processing
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Iverson, Jana M. – Journal of Child Language, 2010
During the first eighteen months of life, infants acquire and refine a whole set of new motor skills that significantly change the ways in which the body moves in and interacts with the environment. In this review article, I argue that motor acquisitions provide infants with an opportunity to practice skills relevant to language acquisition before…
Descriptors: Language Research, Child Language, Infants, Motor Development
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Luo, Yuyan; Beck, Whitney – Developmental Science, 2010
Twelve-month-olds realize that when an agent cannot see an object, her incomplete perceptions still guide her goal-directed actions. What would happen if the agent had incomplete perceptions because she could see only one part of the object, for example one side of a screen? In the present research, 16-month-olds were first shown an agent who…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Infants, Cognitive Processes, Visual Perception
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Schlottmann, Anne; Ray, Elizabeth – Developmental Science, 2010
Infants are sensitive to biological motion, but do they recognize it as animate? As a first step towards answering this question, two experiments investigated whether 6-month-olds selectively attribute goals to shapes moving like animals. We habituated infants to a square moving towards one of two targets. When target locations were switched,…
Descriptors: Animals, Infants, Motion, Goal Orientation
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Markham, Chris M.; Taylor, Stacie L.; Huhman, Kim L. – Learning & Memory, 2010
We examined the roles of the amygdala and hippocampus in the formation of emotionally relevant memories using an ethological model of conditioned fear termed conditioned defeat (CD). Temporary inactivation of the ventral, but not dorsal hippocampus (VH, DH, respectively) using muscimol disrupted the acquisition of CD, whereas pretraining VH…
Descriptors: Infants, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Role, Memory
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Yang, Dahe; Sidman, Jason; Bushnell, Emily W. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
Five experiments were conducted to investigate infants' ability to transfer actions learned via imitation to new objects and to examine what components of the original context are critical to such transfer. Infants of 15 months observed an experimenter perform an action with one or two toys and then were offered a novel toy that was not…
Descriptors: Imitation, Infants, Toys, Experiments
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Sigurdardottir, Solveig; Thorkelsson, Thordur; Halldorsdottir, Margret; Thorarensen, OLafur; Vik, Torstein – Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2009
Aim: To describe trends in cerebral palsy (CP) prevalence, severity, and associated impairments among 139 Icelandic children (65 males, 74 females) born from 1990 to 1996 (period one) and 1997 to 2003 (period two). Method: A population-based study using systematically collected data on motor functioning and associated impairments of children with…
Descriptors: Incidence, Mortality Rate, Cerebral Palsy, Infant Mortality
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Kaldy, Zsuzsa; Blaser, Erik – Infancy, 2009
What kind of featural information do infants rely on when they are trying to recognize a previously seen object? The question of whether infants use certain features (e.g., shape or color) more than others (e.g., luminance) can only be studied legitimately if visual salience is controlled, as the magnitude of feature values--how noticeable and…
Descriptors: Age, Identification, Infants, Visual Stimuli
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Cordes, Sara; Brannon, Elizabeth M. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Although young infants have repeatedly demonstrated successful numerosity discrimination across large sets when the number of items in the sets changes twofold (E. M. Brannon, S. Abbott, & D. J. Lutz, 2004; J. N. Wood & E. S. Spelke, 2005; F. Xu & E. S. Spelke, 2000), they consistently fail to discriminate a twofold change in number when one set…
Descriptors: Infants, Number Concepts, Discrimination Learning, Visual Discrimination
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Jackson, Iain; Sirois, Sylvain – Developmental Science, 2009
The violation-of-expectation (VOE) paradigm and related methods are the main tools used to study high-level cognition in preverbal infants. Infants' differential looking to conceptually implausible/impossible events has been used as an index of early cognitive competence in many areas, including object knowledge, physics, language, and number.…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Infants, Models, Data Interpretation
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McMurray, Bob; Aslin, Richard N.; Toscano, Joseph C. – Developmental Science, 2009
Recent evidence (Maye, Werker & Gerken, 2002) suggests that statistical learning may be an important mechanism for the acquisition of phonetic categories in the infant's native language. We examined the sufficiency of this hypothesis and its implications for development by implementing a statistical learning mechanism in a computational model…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Competition, Statistical Analysis, Infants
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Yoshida, Katherine A.; Fennell, Christopher T.; Swingley, Daniel; Werker, Janet F. – Developmental Science, 2009
Can infants, in the very first stages of word learning, use their perceptual sensitivity to the phonetics of speech while learning words? Research to date suggests that infants of 14 months cannot learn two similar-sounding words unless there is substantial contextual support. The current experiment advances our understanding of this failure by…
Descriptors: Infants, Vocabulary Development, Auditory Perception, Phonetics
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Adachi, Ikuma; Kuwahata, Hiroko; Fujita, Kazuo; Tomonaga, Masaki; Matsuzawa, Tetsuro – Developmental Science, 2009
In a previous study, Adachi, Kuwahata, Fujita, Tomonaga & Matsuzawa demonstrated that infant Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) form cross-modal representations of conspecifics but not of humans. However, because the subjects in the experiment were raised in a large social group and had considerably less exposure to humans than to…
Descriptors: Animals, Photography, Infants, Primatology
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Hess, Ursula; Thibault, Pascal – American Psychologist, 2009
In his book "The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals," Charles Darwin (1872/1965) defended the argument that emotion expressions are evolved and adaptive (at least at some point in the past) and serve an important communicative function. The ideas he developed in his book had an important impact on the field and spawned rich domains of…
Descriptors: Infants, Nonverbal Communication, Evolution, Psychological Patterns
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