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Tellings, Agnes; Coppens, Karien; Gelissen, John; Schreuder, Rob – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2013
Often, the classification of words does not go beyond "difficult" (i.e., infrequent, late-learned, nonimageable, etc.) or "easy" (i.e., frequent, early-learned, imageable, etc.) words. In the present study, we used a latent cluster analysis to divide 703 Dutch words with scores for eight word properties into seven clusters of words. Each cluster…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Multivariate Analysis, Elementary School Students, Grade 2
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Pruden, Shannon M.; Roseberry, Sarah; Goksun, Tilbe; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Golinkoff, Roberta M. – Child Development, 2013
Fundamental to amassing a lexicon of relational terms (i.e., verbs, prepositions) is the ability to abstract and categorize spatial relations such as a figure (e.g., "boy") moving along a path (e.g., "around" the barn). Three studies examine how infants learn to categorize path over changes in "manner," or how an action is performed (e.g., running…
Descriptors: Infants, Classification, English, Language Acquisition
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Lindsay, Shane; Gaskell, M. Gareth – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
Learning a new word involves integration with existing lexical knowledge. Previous work has shown that sleep-associated memory consolidation processes are important for the engagement of novel items in lexical competition. In 3 experiments we used spaced exposure regimes to investigate memory for novel words and whether lexical integration can…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Language Acquisition, English, Sleep
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Zampini, Laura; D'Odorico, Laura – Journal of Intellectual & Developmental Disability, 2013
Background: Research findings on vocabulary development in children with Down syndrome are inconsistent. This study aimed to analyse the developmental trend of vocabulary growth in children with Down syndrome and the relationships between vocabulary and chronological and developmental age. Method: Children's vocabulary size was assessed by a…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Down Syndrome, Longitudinal Studies, Italian
Hewitt, Christine L. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Receptive language skills allow students to understand the meaning of words spoken to them. When students are unable to comprehend the majority of the words that are spoken to them, they do not have the ability to act on those words, follow given directions, build on prior knowledge, or construct adequate meaning. The inability to understand the…
Descriptors: Receptive Language, Language Acquisition, Kindergarten, Young Children
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Frohlich, Linda Paulina; Petermann, Franz; Metz, Dorothee – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2013
Early child development is influenced by various genetic and environmental factors. This study aims to identify factors that affect the phonological awareness of preschool and first grade children. Based on a sample of 330 German-speaking children (mean age = 6.2 years) the following domains were evaluated: Parent factors, birth and pregnancy,…
Descriptors: Pregnancy, Language Impairments, Phonological Awareness, Child Development
Arnold, Jane – Online Submission, 2011
As language teachers, we have to pay attention to many things in our work so why add "attention to affect"? Perhaps the simplest, most direct answer is that whatever we focus most on in our particular context, be it general English, morphosyntax, phonetics, literature, English for academic writing or any other special area, attention to…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Language Teachers, Academic Discourse, Second Language Learning
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Matsumoto-Shimamori, Sachiyo; Ito, Tomohiko; Fukuda, Suzy E.; Fukuda, Shinji – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2011
Shimamori and Ito (2007, Syllable weight and phonological encoding in Japanese children who stutter. "Japanese Journal of Special Education", 44, 451-462; 2008, Syllable weight and frequency of stuttering: Comparison between children who stutter with and without a family history of stuttering. "Japanese Journal of Special Education", 45, 437-445;…
Descriptors: Syllables, Stuttering, Vowels, Japanese
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Valentino, Amber L.; Shillingsburg, M. Alice – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2011
Many children with autism communicate through the use of alternative communication systems, such as sign language. Limited research has been conducted on the situations under which sign language will be acquired across verbal operants without direct teaching. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate exposure to sign language on the…
Descriptors: Augmentative and Alternative Communication, Autism, Sign Language, Children
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Katsos, Napoleon; Bishop, Dorothy V. M. – Cognition, 2011
Recent investigations of the acquisition of scalar implicature report that young children do not reliably reject a sentence with a weak scalar term, e.g. "some of the books are red", when it is used as a description of a situation where a stronger statement is true, e.g. where all the books are red. This is taken as evidence that children do not…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Young Children, Native Speakers, English
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Mayor, Julien; Plunkett, Kim – Developmental Science, 2011
For the last 20 years, developmental psychologists have measured the variability in lexical development of infants and toddlers using the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories (CDIs)--the most widely used parental report forms for assessing language and communication skills in infants and toddlers. We show that CDI reports can…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Toddlers, Infants, Developmental Psychology
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Wonnacott, Elizabeth – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
Successful language acquisition involves generalization, but learners must balance this against the acquisition of lexical constraints. Such learning has been considered problematic for theories of acquisition: if learners generalize abstract patterns to new words, how do they learn lexically-based exceptions? One approach claims that learners use…
Descriptors: Child Language, Artificial Languages, Generalization, Inferences
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Paradis, Johanne; Nicoladis, Elena; Crago, Martha; Genesee, Fred – Journal of Child Language, 2011
Bilingual and monolingual children's (mean age = 4;10) elicited production of the past tense in both English and French was examined in order to test predictions from Usage-Based theory regarding the sensitivity of children's acquisition rates to input factors such as variation in exposure time and the type/token frequency of morphosyntactic…
Descriptors: Monolingualism, French, Language Acquisition, Bilingualism
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Mani, Nivedita; Plunkett, Kim – Journal of Child Language, 2011
Children look longer at a familiar object when presented with either correct pronunciations or small mispronunciations of consonants in the object's label, but not following larger mispronunciations. The current article examines whether children display a similar graded sensitivity to different degrees of mispronunciations of the vowels in…
Descriptors: Evidence, Cues, Vowels, Crying
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Naigles, Letitia R.; Maltempo, Ashley – Journal of Child Language, 2011
Two-, three- and four-year-old English learners enacted sentences that were missing a direct object (e.g. *The zebra brings.). Previous work has indicated that preschoolers faced with such ungrammatical sentences consistently alter the usual meaning of the verb to fit the syntactic frame (enacting "zebra comes"); older children are more likely to…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Verbs, Role, English
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