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Balota, David A.; Cortese, Michael J.; Sergent-Marshall, Susan D.; Spieler, Daniel H.; Yap, Melvin J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
Speeded visual word naming and lexical decision performance are reported for 2,428 words for young adults and healthy older adults. Hierarchical regression techniques were used to investigate the unique predictive variance of phonological features in the onsets, lexical variables (e.g., measures of consistency, frequency, familiarity, neighborhood…
Descriptors: Semantics, Familiarity, Young Adults, Word Recognition
Perfetti, Charles A.; Liu, Ying; Tan, Li Hai – Psychological Review, 2005
The authors examine the implications of research on Chinese for theories of reading and propose the lexical constituency model as a general framework for word reading across writing systems. Word identities are defined by 3 interlinked constituents (orthographic, phonological, and semantic). The implemented model simulates the time course of…
Descriptors: Written Language, Phonology, Reading Processes, Semantics
Shah, Amee P.; Baum, Shari R. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
A semantic priming, lexical-decision study was conducted to examine the ability of left- and right-brain damaged individuals to perceive lexical-stress cues and map them onto lexical-semantic representations. Correctly and incorrectly stressed primes were paired with related and unrelated target words to tap implicit processing of lexical prosody.…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Head Injuries, Priming, Language Processing
Hillert, Dieter G. – Brain and Language, 2004
The current study examines how patients with aphasia access the meanings of idioms during spoken sentence comprehension. In our experiment, we had 4 subjects whose native language is German: 2 left-hemisphere damaged patients (Wernicke's and global aphasia); 1 right-hemisphere damaged patient; and 1 age-matched healthy speaker. Ambiguous…
Descriptors: Patients, Aphasia, Language Patterns, Sentences
de Almeida, Roberto G. – Brain and Language, 2004
Recent research in lexical semantics has suggested that verbs such as begin and enjoy semantically select for a complement that denotes an activity or an event. When no such activity or event is specified in the form of a progressive or infinitival complement, as in John began (to read/reading) the book, the verb is said to ''coerce'' the NP…
Descriptors: Verbs, Semantics, Pragmatics, Inferences
Muller, Ralph-Axel; Basho, Surina – Brain and Language, 2004
There is incomplete consensus on the anatomical demarcation of Broca's area in the left inferior frontal gyrus and its functional characterization remains a matter of debate. Exclusive syntactic specialization has been proposed, but is overall inconsistent with the neuroimaging literature. We examined three functional MRI (fMRI) datasets on…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Brain, Semantics
Micciche, Laura R. – College Composition and Communication, 2004
Rhetorical grammar analysis encourages students to view writing as a material social practice in which meaning is actively made, rather than passively relayed or effortlessly produced. The study of rhetorical grammar can demonstrate to students that language does purposeful, consequential work in the world--work that can be learned and applied.
Descriptors: Literacy, Rhetoric, Grammar, Writing (Composition)
Evans, Jonathan St. B. T.; Over, David E.; Handley, Simon J. – Psychological Review, 2005
P. N. Johnson-Laird and R. M. J. Byrne proposed an influential theory of conditionals in which mental models represent logical possibilities and inferences are drawn from the extensions of possibilities that are used to represent conditionals. In this article, the authors argue that the extensional semantics underlying this theory is equivalent to…
Descriptors: Semantics, Inferences, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes
Kittredge, Audrey; Davis, Lissa; Blumstein, Sheila E. – Brain and Language, 2006
In a series of experiments, the effect of white noise distortion and talker variation on lexical access in normal and Broca's aphasic participants was examined using an auditory lexical decision paradigm. Masking the prime stimulus in white noise resulted in reduced semantic priming for both groups, indicating that lexical access is degraded by…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Acoustics, Auditory Stimuli, Patients
Gagne, Christina L.; Spalding, Thomas L.; Ji, Hongbo – Journal of Memory and Language, 2005
In a recent study of conceptual combination, Estes (2003) presented evidence for the priming of relational information in the absence of shared constituents between the prime and target (e.g., "pancake spatula" was interpreted more quickly following "bacon tongs" than following "city riots"). He argued that these data support the view that…
Descriptors: Semantics, Nouns, Experiments, Syntax
Nelson, Deborah G. Kemler; O'Neil, Kelly – Developmental Science, 2005
We investigated how parents respond to young children's questions about the identity of artifacts. Children's questions were predominantly ambiguous about whether they were inquiring about name or function, but when their questions were more specific, they were almost always about function. For unfamiliar objects, parents responded with functional…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Parent Child Relationship, Language Acquisition, Semantics
Ramscar, Michael – Cognitive Psychology, 2002
How do we produce the past tenses of verbs? For the last 20 years this question has been the focal domain for conflicting theories of language, knowledge representation, and cognitive processing. On one side of the debate have been similarity-based or single-route approaches that propose that all past tenses are formed simply through phonological…
Descriptors: Semantics, Language Processing, Semiotics, Grammar
Gaskell, M. Gareth; Marslen-Wilson, William D. – Cognitive Psychology, 2002
We present data from four experiments using cross-modal priming to examine the effects of competitor environment on lexical activation during the time course of the perception of a spoken word. The research is conducted from the perspective of a distributed model of speech perception and lexical representation, which focuses on activation at the…
Descriptors: Phonology, Semantics, Competition, Auditory Perception
Kittler, Phyllis; Krinsky-McHale, Sharon J.; Devenny, Darlynne A. – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 2004
Semantic and phonological loop effects on verbal working memory were examined among middle-age adults with Down syndrome and those with unspecified mental retardation in the context of Baddeley's working memory model. Recall was poorer for phonologically similar, semantically similar, and long words compared to recall of dissimilar short words.…
Descriptors: Semantics, Phonology, Recall (Psychology), Memory
Gumnior, Heidi; Bolte, Jens; Zwitserlood, Pienie – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2006
Two experiments are reported in which university students translated visually presented English words into German, while German distractor words were simultaneously presented. Distractors were morphologically related, merely form-related or unrelated to the German translations (target words). The transparency of the semantic relation between…
Descriptors: Semantics, German, Morphology (Languages), Translation

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