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Trabasso, Tom – 1989
A study examined how global coherence in story comprehension develops in children through causal inference. Stories of contrasting structure were analyzed by a causal network model. Evidence of parallels between the construction of coherent representations and the development of the story understanding is presented. Data show that children…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Children, Coherence
Koster, Jan; Koster, Charlotte – 1986
Most linguists assume that bound anaphors such as "himself" are connected with their antecedents in a different way from free anaphors such as "him." Bound anaphora resolution is deterministic, based on Principle A of Chomsky's binding theory. Free anaphors, pronominals, cannot be bound in the domain of reflexives (principle…
Descriptors: Child Language, Foreign Countries, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Moerk, Ernest L. – 1985
In the controversy over the conceptualization of language and verbal behavior there is an underlying unity of goals and concepts, characterized in the teaching and learning of the first language as acquisition or transmission of skills. Both the behaviorist and cognitive perspectives of learning accommodate this point of view conceptually, if not…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Comparative Analysis, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
Vosniadou, Stella; Ortony, Andrew – 1982
A study investigated children's ability to distinguish among literal, metaphorical, and anomalous comparisons. The 100 subjects, equal numbers of three-, four-, five-, and six-year-old children and college students, completed similarity statements by choosing one of two words from (1) a metaphorical/literal word pair, (2) a literal/anomalous word…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
Lillo-Martin, Diane – 1984
The acquisition of several word formation devices in American Sign Language (ASL) by deaf children learning ASL as a native language focused on some devices analogous to word formation devices in spoken languages (compounding, affixation, and derivation) and some in ASL that may not have counterparts in spoken languages. They were examined using…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, Form Classes (Languages), Language Acquisition
Bidlack, Betty M. – 1985
A study of the development of abstract noun definitions in children and adolescents had as its subjects 120 students evenly divided into age groups of 10-, 14-, and 18-year-olds, randomly selected from students scoring in the 40th to 88th percentiles on the Iowa Test of Basic Skills (for 10-year-olds) and the Tests of Achievement and Proficiency…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adolescents, Age Differences, Children
Rojo, Ana; Valenzuela, Javier – International Journal of English Studies, 2003
This paper analyzes fictive motion expressions in English and Spanish with the twofold aim of (a) finding out whether the differences that have been reported in the expression of motion in English and Spanish also apply to fictive motion, and (b) checking whether the similarities and differences reported by Matsumoto for English and Japanese also…
Descriptors: Motion, English, Spanish, Contrastive Linguistics
Shedletsky, L. J. – 1977
An experiment was carried out to determine how the memory search of a two-clause complex sentence in immediate memory is carried out. An item-recognition task was performed with 32 native English-speaking, right-handed adults who listened to eight two-clause complex sentences presented to the left ear, each immediately followed by a probe word…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Language Processing, Language Research
Randall, Janet H. – 1981
A model for adult language learning should integrate theories in language acquisition with theories about learnability and proposals about adult language structures. Two particular problems in language acquisition are examined: (1) establishing what counts as a formal relationship in a particular domain, and (2) retreating from overgeneralizations…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Child Language, Generalization, Language Acquisition
Kucer, Stephen B. – 1981
Drawing upon reading and text comprehension theories and the sociolinguistic studies of M. A. K. Halliday and R. Hasan, this paper builds theoretical links between the reading and writing processes. The major portion of the paper discusses the five language concepts that undergird both processes: (1) text processing in both reading and writing…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Language Processing, Learning Theories
Shedletsky, Leonard J. – 1980
In a previous study, subjects that heard a monaurally presented two-clause sentence immediately followed by a probe word (identical word recognition) were faster at recognizing the probe as a sentence word with their left ears than with their right ears. This result suggested that the right ear was particularly efficient at transforming…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Cerebral Dominance, Communication Research
Adams, Marilyn; Bruce, Bertram – 1980
Some of the aspects of the author/reader relationship that make communication possible are discussed in this paper. The paper begins by describing the most important components of that relationship. Next, through an analysis of two readings of one of Aesop's fables, it illustrates the way the author and the reader must depend on these components.…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Elementary Education, Language Processing, Language Skills
Crodian, Bevin – 1979
One perspective for literary analysis assumes certain divisions of language, grammar, and "worlds of discourse." The worlds that language can express are the phenomenal, extensional, intensional, and alternate systems. Within these contexts, certain linguistic features universally affect responses to the world created and the language used. One…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Language Processing, Linguistic Theory, Literary Criticism
Reynolds, Ralph E.; Ortony, Andrew – 1980
A total of 411 elementary school children seven to twelve years old read short prose passages and selected the most appropriate continuation sentence from four alternatives. The completion sentences were constructed so that the correct (target) response involved either an explicit (simile) or an implicit (metaphor) metaphorical comparison. It was…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Elementary Education, Figurative Language
Kraut, Alan G.; Smothergill, Daniel W. – 1980
A familiarization procedure was used in two experiments investigating word encoding in second and sixth graders. Previous studies using release from proactive inhibition had indicated that developmental changes on some encoding dimensions occur during this period. It is argued that the dependence of release from proactive inhibition on deliberate…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition