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McFarlane, Delano J. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Researchers that investigate the media's coverage of health have historically relied on keyword searches to retrieve relevant health news coverage, and manual content analysis methods to categorize and score health news text. These methods are problematic. Manual content analysis methods are labor intensive, time consuming, and inherently…
Descriptors: Obesity, Research Methodology, Public Health, Hypothesis Testing
Tanner, Darren – ProQuest LLC, 2011
This dissertation investigates the neural and behavioral correlates of grammatical agreement computation during language comprehension in native English speakers and highly advanced L1 Spanish-L2 English bilinguals. In a series of electrophysiological (event-related brain potential (ERP)) and behavioral (acceptability judgment and self-paced…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Grammar, Native Speakers, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Ward, W.; Cole, R.; Bolanos, D.; Buchenroth-Martin, C.; Svirsky, E.; Van Vuuren, S.; Weston, T.; Zheng, J.; Becker, L. – Grantee Submission, 2011
This paper describes My Science Tutor (MyST), an intelligent tutoring system designed to improve science learning by students in 3rd, 4th and 5th grades (7 to 11 years old) through conversational dialogs with a virtual science tutor. In our study, individual students engage in spoken dialogs with the virtual tutor Marni during 15 to 20 minute…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Elementary School Students, Science Education, Intelligent Tutoring Systems
Fitzpatrick, Tess; Izura, Cristina – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2011
Word association responses in first-language (L1) Spanish and second-language (L2) English were investigated by means of response latencies and types of associative response produced. The primary aims were to establish whether (a) some response types are produced more often or faster than others, (b) participants' L2 response time profiles mirror…
Descriptors: Priming, Cues, Reaction Time, Language Processing
Estes, Zachary; Verges, Michelle – Cognition, 2008
Humans preferentially attend to negative stimuli. A consequence of this automatic vigilance for negative valence is that negative words elicit slower responses than neutral or positive words on a host of cognitive tasks. Some researchers have speculated that negative stimuli elicit a general suppression of motor activity, akin to the freezing…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Evaluative Thinking, Reaction Time, Emotional Response
Baggio, Giosue; van Lambalgen, Michiel; Hagoort, Peter – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
While syntactic reanalysis has been extensively investigated in psycholinguistics, comparatively little is known about reanalysis in the semantic domain. We used event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to keep track of semantic processes involved in understanding short narratives such as "The girl was writing a letter when her friend spilled coffee…
Descriptors: Sentences, Semantics, Brain, Language Processing
Lee, Yongeun; Goldrick, Matthew – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
In a variety of experimental paradigms speakers do not treat all sub-syllabic sequences equally. In languages like English, participants tend to group vowels and codas together to the exclusion of onsets (i.e., /bet/=/b/-/et/). Three possible accounts of these patterns are examined. A hierarchical account attributes these results to the presence…
Descriptors: Vowels, Short Term Memory, Language Processing, Phonemes
Hartsuiker, Robert J.; Catchpole, Ciara M.; de Jong, Nivja H.; Pickering, Martin J. – Cognition, 2008
Two picture naming experiments, in which an initial picture was occasionally replaced with another (target) picture, were conducted to study the temporal coordination of abandoning one word and resuming with another word in speech production. In Experiment 1, participants abandoned saying the initial name, and resumed with the name of the target…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Experiments, Language Processing, Speech Communication
Hertwig, Ralph; Benz, Bjorn; Krauss, Stefan – Cognition, 2008
According to the conjunction rule, the probability of A "and" B cannot exceed the probability of either single event. This rule reads "and" in terms of the logical operator [inverted v], interpreting A and B as an intersection of two events. As linguists have long argued, in natural language "and" can convey a wide range of relationships between…
Descriptors: Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Probability, Inferences
Monahan, Philip J.; Fiorentino, Robert; Poeppel, David – Brain and Language, 2008
Masked priming is used in psycholinguistic studies to assess questions about lexical access and representation. We present two masked priming experiments using MEG. If the MEG signal elicited by words reflects specific aspects of lexical retrieval, then one expects to identify specific neural correlates of retrieval that are sensitive to priming.…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Cues, Diagnostic Tests, Psycholinguistics
Mashal, N.; Faust, M. – Brain and Language, 2008
The present study used the signal detection theory to test the hypothesis that the right hemisphere (RH) is more sensitive than the left hemisphere (LH) to the distant semantic relations in novel metaphoric expressions. In two divided visual field experiments, sensitivity (d') and criterion ([beta]) were calculated for responses to different types…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Semantics, Figurative Language, Language Processing
Muri, Rene M.; Nyffeler, Thomas – Brain and Cognition, 2008
This review discusses the neurophysiology and neuroanatomy of the cortical control of reflexive and volitional saccades in humans. The main focus is on classical lesion studies and studies using the interference method of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). To understand the behavioural function of a region, it is essential to assess…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Patients, Language Processing, Brain
Ferguson, Heather J.; Sanford, Anthony J. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Counterfactual reasoning is valid reasoning arising from premises that are true in a hypothetical model, but false in actuality. Investigations of counterfactuals have concentrated on reasoning and production, but psycholinguistic research has been more limited. We report three eye-movement studies investigating the comprehension of counterfactual…
Descriptors: Investigations, Psycholinguistics, Thinking Skills, Eye Movements
Syntactic Priming Persists while the Lexical Boost Decays: Evidence from Written and Spoken Dialogue
Hartsuiker, Robert J.; Bernolet, Sarah; Schoonbaert, Sofie; Speybroeck, Sara; Vanderelst, Dieter – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Four experiments in written and spoken dialogue tested the predictions of two distinct accounts of syntactic encoding in sentence production: a lexicalist, residual activation account and an implicit-learning account. Experiments 1 and 2 showed syntactic priming (i.e., the tendency to reuse the syntactic structure of a prime sentence in the…
Descriptors: Syntax, Cues, Written Language, Oral Language
Kielar, A.; Joanisse, Marc F.; Hare, M. L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
A key question in language processing concerns the rule-like nature of many aspects of grammar. Much research on this topic has focused on English past tense morphology, which comprises a regular, rule-like pattern (e.g., bake-baked) and a set of irregular forms that defy a rule-based description (e.g., take-took). Previous studies have used past…
Descriptors: Semantics, Verbs, Language Processing, Morphemes