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Peer reviewedBoers, Frank – Prospect, 2001
Discusses the effectiveness of mental imagery in processing and understanding idiomatic expressions. Investigates the usefulness of mental hypothesizing on the etymological origins of idioms as a key to learning them. (Adjunct ERIC for ESL Literacy Education) (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Craig, Scotty D.; Graesser, Arthur C.; Sullins, Jeremiah; Gholson, Barry – Journal of Educational Media, 2004
The role that affective states play in learning was investigated from the perspective of a constructivist learning framework. We observed six different affect states (frustration, boredom, flow, confusion, eureka and neutral) that potentially occur during the process of learning introductory computer literacy with AutoTutor, an intelligent…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Natural Language Processing, Correlation, Constructivism (Learning)
Legg, Carol; Penn, Claire; Temlett, James; Sonnenberg, Beulah – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2005
A multiple single-case study investigated language characteristics of adolescents with Tourette Syndrome (TS). Ten adolescent subjects with diagnosed TS were evaluated on a test battery sensitive to high level language and discourse impairment. Results were compared to established norms or, where no norms have been established, with results…
Descriptors: Pathology, Language Skills, Adolescents, Psychomotor Skills
Reuterskiold-Wagner, Christina; Sahlen, Birgitta; Nyman, Angelique – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2005
By looking at data on expressive phonology, non-word repetition, non-word discrimination and phonological sensitivity in two groups of Swedish children, the common basis for tasks tapping into different levels of phonological processing is discussed. Two studies were performed, one including children with language impairment (LI) and one including…
Descriptors: Scoring, Phonemes, Identification, Preschool Children
Grela, Bernard; Snyder, William; Hiramatsu, Kazuko – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2005
This study examined ten children with specific language impairment (SLI), 16 normally developing children, and ten adults for the production of novel root compounds. The participants were asked to invent names for pictures of 24 pairs of contrasting, novel objects. For half of the pictures, the context supported a grammatical novel root compound,…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Impairments, Pictorial Stimuli, Children
Vance, Maggie; Stackhouse, Joy; Wells, Bills – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: In recent years, clinicians have been using a psycholinguistic approach to the assessment and remediation of children's developmental speech disorders. This requires the comparison of a child's performance across a range of speech-production tasks. Aims: To describe the profile of performance across different speech-production tasks in…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Speech Communication, Speech Impairments, Young Children
Seung, H.-K.; Chapman, R. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2004
Individuals with Down's syndrome (DS) have an auditory short-term memory span disproportionately shorter than the non-verbal mental age (MA). This study evaluated the Baddeley model's claim that verbal short-term memory deficits might arise from slower speaking rates (and thus less material rehearsed in a 2 s passive store) by using the sentence…
Descriptors: Speech Skills, Sentences, Mental Age, Down Syndrome
Baauw, Sergio; Cuetos, Fernando – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2003
It is well known that English and Dutch children often allow pronouns to refer to local ccommanding antecedents, the so-called Principle B Delay. A similar observation has been made for English agrammatics. This phenomenon, which we call the Pronoun Interpretation Problem (PIP), has been argued to be due to children's and agrammatics' difficulties…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Spanish, Pragmatics, Language Acquisition
Gregg, Noel; Coleman, Chris; Davis, Mark; Lindstrom, William; Hartwig, Jennifer – Psychology in the Schools, 2006
Response to intervention (RTI) has little application to the identification of and access to accommodations for adults with learning disabilities (LD). However, the critical topics raised during the reauthorization of the Individuals With Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004 (IDEA; 2004) pertaining to LD eligibility criteria are similar…
Descriptors: Medical Evaluation, Identification, Eligibility, Learning Disabilities
Chen, Lily – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (IRAL), 2005
A refinement of the verbal process category of MAK Halliday's System of Transitivity makes it possible to distinguish three sub-categories of verbal process: positive, negative and neutral. This in turn makes possible an analysis of negative verbal processes used in a corpus of 50 news texts from the "UK Times" which reveals some of the…
Descriptors: Bias, Text Structure, World Views, Newspapers
Newman, Rochelle; Ratner, Nan Bernstein; Jusczyk, Ann Marie; Jusczyk, Peter W.; Dow, Kathy Ayala – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Two studies examined relationships between infants' early speech processing performance and later language and cognitive outcomes. Study 1 found that performance on speech segmentation tasks before 12 months of age related to expressive vocabulary at 24 months. However, performance on other tasks was not related to 2-year vocabulary. Study 2…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Vocabulary
Schwartz, Ana I.; Kroll, Judith F. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
The present study investigated the cognitive nature of second language (L2) lexical processing in sentence context. We examined bilinguals' L2 word recognition performance for language-ambiguous words [cognates (e.g., "piano") and homographs (e.g., "pan")] in two sentence context experiments with highly proficient Spanish-English bilinguals living…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Sentences, Second Language Learning, Language Processing
Cameron, Lynne; Deignan, Alice – Applied Linguistics, 2006
We show how emergence offers new explanations for the behaviour of metaphorically-used expressions. Analysis of metaphors in two types of natural language data are combined: detailed analysis of continuous discourse, which offers wealth of context and the possibility of monitoring emergent forms as the discourse unfolds, and computer-assisted…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Semantics, Pragmatics, Language Patterns
Reali, Florencia; Christiansen, Morten H. – Cognitive Science, 2005
The poverty of stimulus argument is one of the most controversial arguments in the study of language acquisition. Here we follow previous approaches challenging the assumption of impoverished primary linguistic data, focusing on the specific problem of auxiliary (AUX) fronting in complex polar interrogatives. We develop a series of corpus analyses…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Grammar, Sentence Structure, Stimulus Generalization
Matthews, Danielle E.; Theakston, Anna L. – Cognitive Science, 2006
How do English-speaking children inflect nouns for plurality and verbs for the past tense? We assess theoretical answers to this question by considering errors of omission, which occur when children produce a stem in place of its inflected counterpart (e.g., saying "dress" to refer to 5 dresses). A total of 307 children (aged 3;11-9;9)…
Descriptors: Native Speakers, English, Children, Nouns

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