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Zhang, Jianliang; Kalinowski, Joseph; Saltuklaroglu, Tim; Hudock, Daniel – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2010
Background: Previous studies have found simultaneous increases in skin conductance response and decreases in heart rate when normally fluent speakers watched and listened to stuttered speech compared with fluent speech, suggesting that stuttering induces arousal and emotional unpleasantness in listeners. However, physiological responses of persons…
Descriptors: Metabolism, Stuttering, Coping, Speech Skills
Dahan, Delphine; Mead, Rebecca L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
People were trained to decode noise-vocoded speech by hearing monosyllabic stimuli in distorted and unaltered forms. When later presented with different stimuli, listeners were able to successfully generalize their experience. However, generalization was modulated by the degree to which testing stimuli resembled training stimuli: Testing stimuli's…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Stimuli, Phonology, Testing
Papafragou, Anna; Selimis, Stathis – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2010
It is well known that languages differ in how they encode motion. Languages such as English use verbs that communicate the manner of motion (e.g., "slide", "skip"), while languages such as Greek regularly encode motion paths in verbs (e.g., "enter", "ascend"). Here we ask how such cross-linguistic encoding…
Descriptors: Verbs, Linguistics, Motion, English
Esch, John W.; Esch, Barbara E.; McCart, Jordon D.; Petursdottir, Anna Ingeborg – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2010
In the behavioral literature, self-echoic behavior has been hypothesized to play an important role in, for example, emergent conditional discriminations (e.g., Lowenkron, 1991), emergent verbal operants (Horne & Lowe, 1996), and problem solving (Skinner, 1957). Although early behavioral intervention programs for children with autism emphasize the…
Descriptors: Intervention, Autism, Child Behavior, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Decreased Sensitivity to Phonemic Mismatch in Spoken Word Processing in Adult Developmental Dyslexia
Janse, Esther; de Bree, Elise; Brouwer, Susanne – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2010
Initial lexical activation in typical populations is a direct reflection of the goodness of fit between the presented stimulus and the intended target. In this study, lexical activation was investigated upon presentation of polysyllabic pseudowords (such as "procodile for crocodile") for the atypical population of dyslexic adults to see to what…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Phonemics, Dyslexia, Word Recognition
Lovett, Benjamin J.; Johnson, Theodore L. – Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 2010
The SCAN-3 is a battery of tasks used for the screening and diagnosis of auditory processing disorder. It is available in two versions, one for children (the SCAN-3: C) and one for adolescents and adults (the SCAN-3: A); the latter version of the SCAN-3 is reviewed in this article, although it is very similar to the child version. The primary…
Descriptors: Pathology, Adolescents, Reliability, Test Reviews
Sangals, Jorg; Sommer, Werner – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Response preparation usually facilitates performance, but it may also interfere with other concurrent tasks. In this article, the authors used event-related brain potentials to study how intervening tasks affect response preparation. In 3 experiments, participants performed intervening tasks during the preparation of a precued hand choice…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Probability, Task Analysis, Intervention
Corriveau, Kathleen H.; Goswami, Usha; Thomson, Jennifer M. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2010
Although the relationship between auditory processing and reading-related skills has been investigated in school-age populations and in prospective studies of infants, understanding of the relationship between these variables in the period immediately preceding formal reading instruction is sparse. In this cross-sectional study, auditory…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Phonological Awareness, Emergent Literacy, Reading Instruction
Kovic, Vanja; Plunkett, Kim; Westermann, Gert – Cognition, 2010
The principle of arbitrariness in language assumes that there is no intrinsic relationship between linguistic signs and their referents. However, a growing body of sound-symbolism research suggests the existence of some naturally-biased mappings between phonological properties of labels and perceptual properties of their referents (Maurer,…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Brain, Phonological Awareness
McKeown, Sally; McGlashon, Angela – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2012
This practical teachers' guide will help you to unlock the enormous potential of new technology in order to enhance pupils' learning, particularly for young people with additional needs. Written by two of the UK's leading technology experts, this new resource will enable you to use ICT effectively to make lessons more accessible, motivating and…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Mainstreaming, Educational Technology, Technology Integration
Goudbeek, Martijn; Swingley, Daniel; Smits, Roel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Learning to recognize the contrasts of a language-specific phonemic repertoire can be viewed as forming categories in a multidimensional psychophysical space. Research on the learning of distributionally defined visual categories has shown that categories defined over 1 dimension are easy to learn and that learning multidimensional categories is…
Descriptors: Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Classification, Recognition (Psychology), Oral Language
Bunn, William; Terpstra, Jan – Academic Psychiatry, 2009
Objective: The authors address the issue of cultivating medical students' empathy for the mentally ill by examining medical student empathy pre- and postsimulated auditory hallucination experience. Methods: At the University of Utah, 150 medical students participated in this study during their 6-week psychiatry rotation. The Jefferson Scale of…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Auditory Stimuli, Perception, Validity
DeLoache, Judy S.; LoBue, Vanessa – Developmental Science, 2009
Why are snakes such a common target of fear? One current view is that snake fear is one of several innate fears that emerge spontaneously. Another is that humans have an evolved predisposition to learn to fear snakes. In the first study reported here, 9- to 10-month-old infants showed no differential spontaneous reaction to films of snakes versus…
Descriptors: Animals, Infants, Fear, Films
Marsh, John E.; Hughes, Robert W.; Jones, Dylan M. – Cognition, 2009
Distraction by irrelevant background sound of visually-based cognitive tasks illustrates the vulnerability of attentional selectivity across modalities. Four experiments centred on auditory distraction during tests of memory for visually-presented semantic information. Meaningful irrelevant speech disrupted the free recall of semantic…
Descriptors: Semantics, Semiotics, Memory, Attention
Bonfiglioli, Claudia; Finocchiaro, Chiara; Gesierich, Benno; Rositani, Francesco; Vescovi, Massimo – Cognition, 2009
The Italian demonstrative pronouns "questo/a" ("this[subscript [mas/fem]]") and "quello/a" ("that[subscript [mas/fem]]") implicitly convey information about objects' distance with respect to the speaker. Our study investigated the referents of "questo/a" ("this[subscript [mas/fem]]") and "quello/a" ("that[subscript [mas/fem]]") by analysing their…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Form Classes (Languages), Evaluation Methods, Auditory Stimuli

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