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Botting, Nicola; Adams, Catherine – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: Semantic and inferencing abilities have not been fully examined in children with communication difficulties. Aims: To investigate the inferential and semantic abilities of children with communication difficulties using newly designed tasks. Methods & Procedures: Children with different types of communication disorder were compared with…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Task Analysis, Semantics, Pragmatics
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Reinhart, Tanya – Language Acquisition, 2004
Reference set computation -- the construction of a (global) comparison set to determine whether a given derivation is appropriate in context -- comes with a processing cost. I argue that this cost is directly visible at the acquisition stage: In those linguistic areas in which it has been independently established that such computation is indeed…
Descriptors: Semantics, Syntax, Language Classification, Linguistic Theory
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Fisher, Cynthia; Klingler, Stacy L.; Song, Hyun-joo – Cognition, 2006
Children as young as two use sentence structure to learn the meanings of verbs. We probed the generality of sensitivity to sentence structure by moving to a different semantic and syntactic domain, spatial prepositions. Twenty-six-month-olds used sentence structure to determine whether a new word was an object-category name ("This is a corp!") or…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Form Classes (Languages), Toddlers, Language Acquisition
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Hall, Nancy E. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2004
This article describes the role of lexical acquisition in stuttering by examining the research on word learning and interactions between semantics and syntax in typically developing children and children who stutter. The potential effects of linguistic mismatches, or dysynchronies in language skills, on the possible onset and development of…
Descriptors: Syntax, Semantics, Language Skills, Stuttering
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Norris, Dennis; Cutler, Anne; McQueen, James M.; Butterfield, Sally – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
We propose that speech comprehension involves the activation of token representations of the phonological forms of current lexical hypotheses, separately from the ongoing construction of a conceptual interpretation of the current utterance. In a series of cross-modal priming experiments, facilitation of lexical decision responses to visual target…
Descriptors: Semantics, Sentences, Word Recognition, Phonology
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Clark, Eve V. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
In learning the meaning of a new term, children need to fix its reference, learn its conventional meaning, and discover the meanings with which it contrasts. To do this, children must attend to adult speakers--the experts--and to their patterns of use. In the domain of color, children need to identify color terms as such, fix the reference of each…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Adults, Children, Color
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Kowalski, Kurt; Zimiles, Herbert – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
Young children experience considerable difficulty in learning their first few color terms. One explanation for this difficulty is that initially they lack a conceptual representation of color sufficiently abstract to support word meaning. This hypothesis, that prior to learning color terms children do not represent color as an abstraction, was…
Descriptors: Color, Young Children, Semantics, Language Acquisition
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Hino, Yasushi; Pexman, Penny M.; Lupker, Stephen J. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
According to parallel distributed processing (PDP) models of visual word recognition, the speed of semantic coding is modulated by the nature of the orthographic-to-semantic mappings. Consistent with this idea, an ambiguity disadvantage and a relatedness-of-meaning (ROM) advantage have been reported in some word recognition tasks in which semantic…
Descriptors: Semantics, Language Processing, Word Recognition, Classification
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Green, Collin; Hummel, John E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Identification of objects in a scene may be influenced by functional relations among those objects. In this study, observers indicated whether a target object matched a label. Each target was presented with a distractor object, and these were sometimes arranged to interact (as if being used together) and sometimes not to interact. When the…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Identification, Visual Stimuli, Cognitive Processes
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Stenning, Keith; van Lambalgen, Michiel – Cognitive Science, 2005
Interpretation is the process whereby a hearer reasons to an interpretation of a speaker's discourse. The hearer normally adopts a credulous attitude to the discourse, at least for the purposes of interpreting it. That is to say the hearer tries to accommodate the truth of all the speaker's utterances in deriving an intended model. We present a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Models, Logical Thinking, Language Processing
Balasubramanian, V. – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Recent clinical observations, in the absence of experimental data, appear to suggest that written expression in conduction aphasics parallels their speech (Goodglass, 1992). The current study undertakes an analysis of word level writing in two conduction aphasics, and attempts to explore the posited 'parallel' relationship between speech…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Dysgraphia, Tests, Semantics
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Tehan, Gerald; Humphreys, Michael S.; Tolan, Georgina Anne; Pitcher, Cameron – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Cued recall with an extralist cue poses a challenge for contemporary memory theory in that there is a need to explain how episodic and semantic information are combined. A parallel activation and intersection approach proposes one such means by assuming that an experimental cue will elicit its preexisting semantic network and a context cue will…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Semantics, Memory, Language Processing
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Randall, Billi; Moss, Helen E.; Rodd, Jennifer M.; Greer, Mike; Tyler, Lorraine K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Patients with category-specific deficits have motivated a range of hypotheses about the structure of the conceptual system. One class of models claims that apparent category dissociations emerge from the internal structure of concepts rather than fractionation of the system into separate substores. This account claims that distinctive properties…
Descriptors: Semantics, Patients, Linguistic Theory, Computation
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Coulson, Seana; Federmeier, Kara D.; Van Petten, Cyma; Kutas, Marta – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Researchers using lateralized stimuli have suggested that the left hemisphere is sensitive to sentence-level context, whereas the right hemisphere (RH) primarily processes word-level meaning. The authors investigated this message-blind RH model by measuring associative priming with event-related brain potentials (ERPs). For word pairs in…
Descriptors: Sentences, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Wolfe, Michael B. W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
The author examined memory for text in terms of the independent influences of semantic knowledge associations and text organization. Semantic associations were operationalized as the semantic relatedness between individual text concepts and the text as a whole and assessed with latent semantic analysis. The author assessed text organization by…
Descriptors: Semantics, Recall (Psychology), Language Styles, Familiarity
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