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Remine, Maria D.; Brown, P. Margaret; Care, Esther; Rickards, Field – Deafness and Education International, 2007
For several decades the intellectual abilities of deaf children and adolescents, as measured by performance IQ, have been reported as comparable with those of hearing children and adolescents. Differences have been reported, however, on measures of verbal IQ, with deaf children and adolescents typically obtaining verbal IQ scores within the low…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Speech Skills, Delayed Speech, Oral Language
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Cameron-Faulkner, Thea; Lieven, Elena; Theakston, Anna – Journal of Child Language, 2007
The study investigates the development of English multiword negation, in particular the negation of zero marked verbs (e.g. "no sleep", "not see", "can't reach") from a usage-based perspective. The data was taken from a dense database consisting of the speech of an English-speaking child (Brian) aged 2;3-3;4 (MLU 2.05-3.1) and his mother. The…
Descriptors: Creativity, Mothers, Verbs, Language Usage
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Krych-Appelbaum, Meredyth; Musial, Joanna – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2007
Every day students are able to discuss complex ideas relatively easily in spontaneous conversation, yet when they attempt to express complex ideas in a written paper, students often experience great difficulty. The features of face-to-face conversation and of written communication differ in a number of respects. This study examines student's…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Student Attitudes, Peer Evaluation, Interpersonal Communication
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Taguchi, Naoko – Language Teaching Research, 2007
This study examined the development of spoken discourse among L2 learners of Japanese who received extensive practice on grammatical chunks. Participants in this study were 22 college students enrolled in an elementary Japanese course. They received instruction on a set of grammatical chunks in class through communicative drills and the…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Grammar, Drills (Practice), Japanese
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Braze, David; Tabor, Whitney; Shankweiler, Donald P.; Mencl, W. Einar – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2007
This study is part of a broader project aimed at developing cognitive and neurocognitive profiles of adolescent and young adult readers whose educational and occupational prospects are constrained by their limited literacy skills. We explore the relationships among reading-related abilities in participants ages 16 to 24 years spanning a wide range…
Descriptors: Memory, Young Adults, Vocabulary Development, Literacy
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Healey, Patrick G. T.; Swoboda, Nik; Umata, Ichiro; King, James – Cognitive Science, 2007
The emergence of shared symbol systems is considered to be a pivotal moment in human evolution and human development. These changes are normally explained by reference to changes in people's internal cognitive processes. We present 2 experiments which provide evidence that changes in the external, collaborative processes that people use to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition, Evolution, Cognitive Development
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Wolfe, Michael B. W.; Mienko, Joseph A. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2007
Background: Research on the presentation of information in narrative versus expository text genres is inconclusive with respect to the question of which is more beneficial for student learning. Aims: We examine the effect of presenting factual content in either narrative or expository genres on student learning. We also consider relevant prior…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Undergraduate Students, Memory, Human Body
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Auer, Edward T., Jr.; Bernstein, Lynne E. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2007
Purpose: L. E. Bernstein, M. E. Demorest, and P. E. Tucker (2000) demonstrated enhanced speechreading accuracy in participants with early-onset hearing loss compared with hearing participants. Here, the authors test the generalization of Bernstein et al.'s (2000) result by testing 2 new large samples of participants. The authors also investigated…
Descriptors: Lipreading, College Students, Adults, Speech
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Corley, Martin; MacGregor, Lucy J.; Donaldson, David I. – Cognition, 2007
Everyday speech is littered with disfluency, often correlated with the production of less predictable words (e.g., Beattie & Butterworth [Beattie, G., & Butterworth, B. (1979). Contextual probability and word frequency as determinants of pauses in spontaneous speech. "Language and Speech, 22," 201-211.]). But what are the effects of disfluency on…
Descriptors: Listening Comprehension, Word Frequency, Speech Communication, Recognition (Psychology)
Malcolm, Karen – 1991
Realistic spoken discourse, as it actually is used in real-life situations, would not be acceptable in the written medium: the established conventions of the written medium are not adequately equipped to convey the phonological subtleties and undertones of speech. Novelists use dialogue to imitate or mirror reality, but writing carries with it…
Descriptors: Authors, Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Fiction
Van Mersbergen, Audrey M. – 1994
Communication scholars have dichotomized language into orality and literacy, with orality being the language of the "concrete" and literacy being the language of the "abstract." However, the human experience of language is not that simplistic. In daily linguistic patterns, written words and the "literal" are not…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Role, Literacy, Oral Language
Halliday, M. A. K. – 1990
Literacy is examined from the viewpoint of systemic linguistics. It is proposed that "literacy" means intervening in the social processes by working with written language, and this can not be accomplished by an individual alone. "Using written language" can not be isolated from "using language." While sociologically,…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Definitions, Linguistic Theory, Literacy
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Coveney, Aidan – 1988
An investigation of interrogative structures in French examined the extent to which variation in the structure of the questions was conditioned by their function. Data are drawn from a corpus containing 177 yes/no questions and 117 WH- questions. Findings suggest the following: (1) in identifying the communicative function of interrogatives, it is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, French, Interpersonal Communication, Language Patterns
Cameron, Carrie – 1989
This study examines the use in Japanese of verb forms containing -(r)are in syntactical expressions. The meaning and function of the adversative passive and its behavior vis-a-vis the non-adversative or plain passive is discussed, and the related non-derived constructions and their relationships to the adversative passive are analyzed. Finally the…
Descriptors: Japanese, Morphemes, Oral Language, Semantics
Russell, Steven C. – 1982
The study was designed to explore descriptively the differences in oral language production of three learning disabled children (8 to 9 years old) compared to normal children through observable spontaneous conversational interaction. Spontaneous language samples were videotaped and audiotaped in conversation with the experimenter, a peer, and the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Skills, Learning Disabilities, Oral Language
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