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Doignon-Camus, Nadege; Bonnefond, Anne; Touzalin-Chretien, Pascale; Dufour, Andre – Brain and Language, 2009
The present study examined whether written syllable units are perceived in first steps of letter string processing. An illusory conjunction experiment was conducted while event-related potentials were recorded. Colored pseudowords were presented such that there was a match or mismatch between the syllable boundaries and the color boundaries. The…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Syllables, Cognitive Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Carreiras, Manuel; Gillon-Dowens, Margaret; Vergara, Marta; Perea, Manuel – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
To investigate the neural bases of consonant and vowel processing, event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded while participants read words and pseudowords in a lexical decision task. The stimuli were displayed in three different conditions: (i) simultaneous presentation of all letters (baseline condition); (ii) presentation of all letters,…
Descriptors: Vowels, Word Recognition, Reaction Time, Brain
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Lau, Ellen; Almeida, Diogo; Hines, Paul C.; Poeppel, David – Brain and Language, 2009
The electrophysiological response to words during the "N400" time window (approximately 300-500 ms post-onset) is affected by the context in which the word is presented, but whether this effect reflects the impact of context on "access" of the stored lexical information itself or, alternatively, post-access "integration" processes is still an open…
Descriptors: Sentences, Context Effect, Semantics, Reading Processes
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Camp, Gino; Pecher, Diane; Schmidt, Henk G.; Zeelenberg, Rene – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
The independent cue technique has been developed to test traditional interference theories against inhibition theories of forgetting. In the present study, the authors tested the critical criterion for the independence of independent cues: Studied cues not presented during test (and unrelated to test cues) should not contribute to the retrieval…
Descriptors: Cues, Language Processing, Measurement Techniques, Recall (Psychology)
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Llanes, Angels; Munoz, Carmen – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2009
Given that summer abroad programs are becoming more and more popular, the aim of the present study is to find out whether foreign language proficiency can be significantly improved during a summer stay of 3-4 weeks. The present study examines learners' linguistic gains through oral fluency and accuracy measures as well as a listening comprehension…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, Summer Programs, Educational Improvement, Language Proficiency
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Bahl, Megha; Plante, Elena; Gerken, LouAnn – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2009
Two experiments investigated the ability of adults with a history of language-based learning disability (hLLD) and their normal language (NL) peers to learn prosodic patterns of a novel language. Participants were exposed to stimuli from an artificial language and tested on items that required generalization of the stress patterns and the…
Descriptors: Adults, Learning Disabilities, Language Processing, Suprasegmentals
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Andrews, Sally; Bond, Rachel – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2009
The lexical quality hypothesis assumes that skilled readers rely on high quality lexical representations that afford autonomous lexical retrieval and reduce the need to rely on top-down context. This experiment investigated this hypothesis by comparing the performance of adults classified on reading comprehension and spelling performance. "Lexical…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Reading Skills, Figurative Language, Adults
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Gow, David W., Jr.; Keller, Corey J.; Eskandar, Emad; Meng, Nate; Cash, Sydney S. – Brain and Language, 2009
In this work, we apply Granger causality analysis to high spatiotemporal resolution intracranial EEG (iEEG) data to examine how different components of the left perisylvian language network interact during spoken language perception. The specific focus is on the characterization of serial versus parallel processing dependencies in the dominant…
Descriptors: Speech, Oral Language, Medicine, Auditory Perception
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Mbwana, J.; Berl, M. M.; Ritzl, E. K.; Rosenberger, L.; Mayo, J.; Weinstein, S.; Conry, J. A.; Pearl, P. L.; Shamim, S.; Moore, E. N.; Sato, S.; Vezina, L. G.; Theodore, W. H.; Gaillard, W. D. – Brain, 2009
Neural networks for processing language often are reorganized in patients with epilepsy. However, the extent and location of within and between hemisphere re-organization are not established. We studied 45 patients, all with a left hemisphere seizure focus (mean age 22.8, seizure onset 13.3), and 19 normal controls (mean age 24.8) with an fMRI…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Epilepsy, Patients, Language Processing
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Wagers, Matthew W.; Lau, Ellen F.; Phillips, Colin – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Much work has demonstrated so-called attraction errors in the production of subject-verb agreement (e.g., "The key to the cabinets are on the table", [Bock, J. K., & Miller, C. A. (1991). "Broken agreement." "Cognitive Psychology, 23", 45-93]), in which a verb erroneously agrees with an intervening noun. Six self-paced reading experiments examined…
Descriptors: Sentences, Verbs, Nouns, Grammar
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Waxman, Sandra R.; Lidz, Jeffrey L.; Braun, Irena E.; Lavin, Tracy – Cognitive Psychology, 2009
The current experiments address several concerns, both empirical and theoretical in nature, that have surfaced within the verb learning literature. They begin to reconcile what, until now, has been a large and largely unexplained gap between infants' well-documented ability to acquire verbs in the natural course of their lives and their rather…
Descriptors: Verbs, Nouns, Infants, Language Processing
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Yoon, Jiyoung – Language Sciences, 2009
This study examines Spanish [Verb + Noun (V + N)] compounds based on insights drawn from Construction Grammar. In contrast to previous studies that treat Spanish [V + N] compounds as having one common structural and semantic property, this study proposes two types of [V + N] compound constructions in Spanish, each with its own respective…
Descriptors: Semantics, Nouns, Grammar, Linguistic Theory
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Chetail, Fabienne; Mathey, Stephanie – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2009
The present study addressed the issue of syllable activation during visual recognition of French words. In addition, it was investigated whether word orthographic information underlies syllable effects. To do so, words were selected according to the frequency of their first syllable (high versus low) and the frequency of the orthographic…
Descriptors: Syllables, Word Recognition, French, Orthographic Symbols
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Chang, Franklin – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Languages differ from one another and must therefore be learned. Processing biases in word order can also differ across languages. For example, heavy noun phrases tend to be shifted to late sentence positions in English, but to early positions in Japanese. Although these language differences suggest a role for learning, most accounts of these…
Descriptors: Sentences, Nouns, Syntax, Language Processing
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de Goede, Dieuwke; Shapiro, Lewis P.; Wester, Femke; Swinney, David A.; Bastiaanse, Roelien – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2009
The verb has traditionally been characterized as the central element in a sentence. Nevertheless, the exact role of the verb during the actual ongoing comprehension of a sentence as it unfolds in time remains largely unknown. This paper reports the results of two Cross-Modal Lexical Priming (CMLP) experiments detailing the pattern of verb priming…
Descriptors: Sentences, Verbs, Nouns, Language Processing
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