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Showing 31 to 45 of 1,238 results Save | Export
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Leah Durán; Katie A. Bernstein – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2024
This paper describes name-related literacy practices in a multilingual preschool classroom and their implications for emergent biliteracy. We draw on a translingual framework to understand children's name-writing activities and how bilingual children's early literacy interacts with, and at times disrupts, the written conventions of named…
Descriptors: Naming, Literacy, Multilingualism, Early Childhood Education
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Nathan D. Maxfield – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2024
Purpose: Target word activation in picture naming was explored in children who stutter (CWS) and typically fluent children (TFC) using event-related potentials (ERPs). Method: A total of 18 CWS and 16 TFC completed a task combining picture naming and probe word identification. On each trial, a picture-to-be-named was followed by an auditory probe…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Stuttering, Naming, Visual Stimuli
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Sadirova Kulzat Kanievna; Zhazykova Raushan Balgalievna; Yessenova Kalbike Umirbaevna; Sapina Sabira Minataevna; Mirov Mukhtar Orynbasaruly; Abdirova Sholpan Gaidarovna – Eurasian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2024
In linguistics, onomastics is the science that studies the history and origin of toponyms, along with their structural aspects. This study aimed to determine the origin of toponyms by comparing their linguistic and ethnocultural, as well as mythical, information. A qualitative research design guided this study. A few toponyms were identified…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Turkic Languages, Dictionaries, Ethnic Groups
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Cranford, Edward A.; Moss, Jarrod – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2023
When a situation could lead to multiple mutually exclusive consequences, recent research shows that people automatically generate multiple predictive inferences in memory. Several theoretical mechanisms have been proposed to account for the generation of predictive inferences. One hypothesis is that inferences are minimally encoded, represented…
Descriptors: Prediction, Inferences, Cognitive Processes, Semantics
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Bakopoulou, Milena; Lorenz, Megan G.; Forbes, Samuel H.; Tremlin, Rachel; Bates, Jessica; Samuelson, Larissa K. – Developmental Science, 2023
Words direct visual attention in infants, children, and adults, presumably by activating representations of referents that then direct attention to matching stimuli in the visual scene. Novel, unknown, words have also been shown to direct attention, likely via the activation of more general representations of naming events. To examine the critical…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Attention, Eye Movements, Nouns
Joan Lea Brown – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This qualitative case study focuses on renaming an elementary school in Tulsa, Oklahoma from a Confederate namesake (Robert E. Lee elementary) to a name reflecting Indigenous roots of the Muskogee Creek Nation (Council Oak). The renaming took place during a national movement of removing Confederate symbols and names from public places. The…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Naming, Indigenous Populations, United States History
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Lori G. Foran; Brenda L. Beverly; John Shelley-Tremblay; Julie M. Estis – Journal of Child Language, 2023
Forty-eight toddlers participated in a word-learning task to assess gesture input on mapping nonce words to unfamiliar objects. Receptive fast mapping and expressive naming for target object-word pairs were tested in three conditions -- with a point, with a shape gesture, and in a no-gesture, word-only condition. No statistically significant…
Descriptors: Child Language, Nonverbal Communication, Toddlers, Language Acquisition
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Lany, Jill; Thompson, Abbie; Aguero, Ariel – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Words influence cognition well before infants know their meanings. For example, three-month-olds are more likely to form visually based categories when exemplars are paired with spoken words than with sine-wave tones, a likely precursor to learning symbolic relations between words and their referents. However, it is unclear why words have these…
Descriptors: Infants, Naming, Nonverbal Communication, Classification
Mo, Yuji – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The research in this dissertation consists of two parts: An active learning algorithm for hierarchical labels and an embedding-based retrieval algorithm. In the first part, we present a new approach for learning hierarchically decomposable concepts. The approach learns a high-level classifier (e.g., location vs. non-location) by separately…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Algorithms, Classification, Models
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Joanna Kamykowska; Magdalena Luniewska; Natalia Banasik-Jemielniak; Ewa Czaplewska; Magdalena Kochanska; Grzegorz Krajewski; Agnieszka Maryniak; Katarzyna Wiejak; Grazyna Krasowicz-Kupis; Ewa Haman – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2025
We investigated the comorbidity of low language and reading skills in 6- to 8-year-old monolingual Polish-speaking children (N = 962) using three different approaches: norming data to determine the prevalence of co-morbid difficulties, group comparisons of profiles on key cognitive-linguistic measures, and a case series analysis examining the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Polish, Language Skills, Reading Skills
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Aija Kotila; Leena Mäkinen; Eeva Leinonen; Soile Loukusa – First Language, 2025
This study investigated the complex relationship between false-belief (FB) understanding, structural language and pragmatic communication in typically developing children. A total of 78 Finnish children, aged from 4 to 6 years, including an equal number of boys and girls, participated in this study. In the first instance, the study explored the…
Descriptors: Children, Child Development, Thinking Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer)
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Rebecca Treiman; Jacqueline Hulslander; Erik G. Willcutt; Bruce F. Pennington; Richard K. Olson – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2025
The goal of the present study was to test theories about the extent to which individual differences in word reading align with those in spelling and the extent to which other cognitive and linguistic skills play different roles in word reading and spelling. Using data from 1,116 children ranging from 8 to 17 years, we modeled word reading and…
Descriptors: Reading Ability, Spelling, Individual Differences, Children
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Drew Atchison; Umut Özek; Kerstin Le Floch; Steven Hurlburt – Grantee Submission, 2025
We examine the causal effects of Comprehensive Support and Improvement (CSI) school designation under the Every Student Succeeds Act on student outcomes in Ohio using a regression discontinuity design. We find that the designation had no positive effects in the four years following designation, but it did have negative effects on attendance,…
Descriptors: Educational Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation, Naming
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Sibel Karabekmez; Sümeyra Soysal; Arzu Balci – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
In this study, the effects of the number naming system and age factor on the counting skills of children speaking Turkish and Dutch at the ages of 4 (n = 50) and 5 (n = 50) were examined. Children were given four counting skill tasks which were designed with different scenarios for children's counting skills under the sub-headings of rote…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Computation, Numbers
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Emily B. Goldberg; William D. Hula; Robert Cavanaugh; Alexander M. Swiderski; Alyssa Autenreith; Michael Walsh Dickey – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Purpose: Aphasia rehabilitation is a learning process that unfolds over time. Previous group studies have examined aphasia treatment response using pre- to posttreatment comparison, largely ignoring the unfolding learning response that occurs session-to-session. We aimed to (a) characterize the shape of learning while individuals with aphasia…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Rehabilitation, Naming, Speech Therapy
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