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Jones, Keith S.; Farris, J. Shawn; Elgin, Peter D.; Anders, Brent A.; Johnson, Brian R. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 2005
This study used verbal protocol analysis to examine the behavior of an individual with visual impairment using a self-voicing application to find information on the World Wide Web. The results indicated that executing actions (such as typing or pressing keys) and interpreting the computer system's state (data gathering) were the most frequent and…
Descriptors: Protocol Analysis, Internet, Visual Impairments, Keyboarding (Data Entry)
Wallis, Delia; Musselman, Carol; MacKay, Sherri – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2004
In the few studies that have been conducted, researchers have typically found that deaf adolescents have more mental health difficulties than their hearing peers and that, within the deaf groups, those who use spoken language have better mental health functioning than those who use sign language. This study investigated the hypotheses that mental…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Sign Language, Oral Language, Mothers
Cleland, Alexandra A.; Gaskell, M. Gareth; Quinlan, Philip T.; Tamminen, Jakke – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The authors report 3 dual-task experiments concerning the locus of frequency effects in word recognition. In all experiments, Task 1 entailed a simple perceptual choice and Task 2 involved lexical decision. In Experiment 1, an underadditive effect of word frequency arose for spoken words. Experiment 2 also showed underadditivity for visual lexical…
Descriptors: Word Frequency, Word Recognition, Visual Stimuli, Language Processing
The Role of Oral Language Revisited: A Comment on the NICHD Early Child Care Research Network (2005)
Bracken, Stacey Storch – Developmental Psychology, 2005
This article comments on the discussion of S. A. Storch and G. J. Whitehurst's literacy development model in the article by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Early Child Care Research Network (ECCRN). Specifically, this comment focuses on concerns raised by the NICHD ECCRN that Storch and Whitehurst's model does…
Descriptors: Oral Language, Literacy Education, Emergent Literacy, Early Reading
Sekiguchi, Takahiro – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
Lexical prosody (e.g., stress and pitch accent) has been shown to constrain lexical activation of spoken words in various languages. In the present study, whether or not the constraint of lexical prosody is affected by word familiarity in lexical access of Japanese words was examined using a cross-modal priming task. The stimuli were pairs of…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Word Recognition, Japanese, Oral Language
Pynte, Joel – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
The role of prosodic phrasing in sentence comprehension was investigated by means of three different tasks, namely auditory word monitoring (Experiment 1), self-paced reading (Experiment 2) and cross-modal comparison (Experiment 3). In all three experiments a critical prosodic unit or frame comprising a determiner, a noun and a Prepositional…
Descriptors: Syntax, Suprasegmentals, Nouns, Form Classes (Languages)
What Works Clearinghouse, 2006
"Shared Book Reading" is a general practice aimed at enhancing young children's language and literacy skills and their appreciation of books. Typically, "Shared Book Reading" involves an adult reading a book to one child or a small group of children without requiring extensive interactions from them. Three studies of…
Descriptors: Oral Reading, Preschool Children, Oral Language, Language Processing
Pete, Brian M.; Fogarty, Robin J. – Corwin Press, 2007
The idea that the person doing the talking is the person doing the learning seems counter-intuitive. Yet, that is exactly the case. When students put their thoughts into words, they internalize the learning. As they dialogue with peers, articulate their ideas, and express themselves, their oral language skills translate directly into written…
Descriptors: Sentences, Oral Language, English, Language Skills
Granado, Elvalicia – Online Submission, 2007
The study investigated the ability of 10-month-old infants, from monolingual English speaking environments, to categorize comforting and approving infant-directed speech (IDS) utterances across languages. Infants participated in an infant-controlled habituation procedure, in which they heard up to 12 different exemplars, in 12 different languages,…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Infants, Monolingualism, Habituation
Bajaj, Amit – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2007
Measures of language sample length (in c-units) and morphological, syntactic, and narrative abilities were obtained from oral narrative transcripts of 22 children who stutter and 22 children who do not stutter; participants attended kindergarten, first, and second grades. A two-way MANOVA yielded significant main effects for grade, with…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Kindergarten, Statistical Significance, Expressive Language
Goldstein, Brian A. – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2007
The effects of dialectal differences upon the speech production skills of children with phonological disorders are poorly understood. One might predict that the phonological profile of children using a radical dialect (e.g., Puerto Rican Spanish, which alters consonants in the syllable rhyme) will differ from that of children who use a…
Descriptors: North Americans, Mexicans, Dialects, Measures (Individuals)
Taguchi, Naoko – Applied Linguistics, 2007
This study took a pragmatic approach to examining the effects of task difficulty on L2 oral output. Twenty native English speakers and 59 Japanese students of English at two different proficiency levels produced speech acts of requests and refusals in a role play task. The task had two situation types based on three social variables:…
Descriptors: Speech Acts, Role Playing, Task Analysis, Native Speakers
Pantaleo, Sylvia – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2007
Mercer, N. (1995) coined the term interthinking to link the cognitive and social functions of group talk. Essentially, interthinking means using talk to think collectively, to engage with others' ideas through oral language. In this article I share four excerpts from small group interactive read-aloud sessions that were conducted with Grade 1…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Oral Language, Picture Books, Group Discussion
Halleck, Gene – Simulation & Gaming, 2007
This study analyzes the use of role-play as an elicitation device for the evaluation of a nonnative speaker's oral language. In this analysis of role-play as a methodology to generate data for assessment purposes, the study examines the role that interlocutors play in two types of interactions. It raises questions about the validity and…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Oral Language, Second Language Learning, Validity
Murty, Lalita; Otake, Takashi; Cutler, Anne – Language and Speech, 2007
Listeners rely on native-language rhythm in segmenting speech; in different languages, stress-, syllable- or mora-based rhythm is exploited. The rhythmic similarity hypothesis holds that where two languages have similar rhythm, listeners of each language should segment their own and the other language similarly. Such similarity in listening was…
Descriptors: Language Rhythm, Phonology, Dravidian Languages, Undergraduate Students

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