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Showing 241 to 255 of 479 results Save | Export
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Gerken, Louann; And Others – Cognition, 1994
Infants heard sentences in which prosodic structure was either consistent or inconsistent with the syntactic structure. Results suggest that the prosodic information in an individual sentence is not always sufficient to assign a syntactic structure and that learners must engage in active inferential processes to arrive at the correct syntactic…
Descriptors: Infants, Inferences, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
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Bishop, D. V. M.; Adams, C. V.; Rosen, S. – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2006
Background: Receptive language impairments in school-age children have a poor prognosis, yet there is a dearth of research on effective interventions. Aims: Children's responses to a computerized grammatical training program were evaluated to consider whether repeated responding to spoken sentences with variable semantic content and the same…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Semantics, Sentence Structure, Receptive Language
Froese, Victor – 1977
Designed to investigate the types of responses given to a sentence completion task when constraint elements of word order, word form, redundancy, distance between lexical items, and the interaction among these elements are considered, this instrument consists of 34 sentences, half of which are high associative sentences, while the other half are…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Language Processing, Sentence Structure
Berent, Gerald P. – 1981
First language acquisition studies reveal that children overextend the minimal distance principle (MDP) during their acquisition of infinitive complement structures. The MDP dictates the interpretation of the logical subject of the infinitive in these structures and overrides marked lexical features such as subject control. Misinterpretations by…
Descriptors: Adults, Deafness, Language Processing, Language Research
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Carroll, John M.; Tanenhaus, Michael K. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1978
In two experiments Ss (16 undergraduate students in the first, 14 in the second) listened to a sentence containing a brief tone, then wrote out the sentence and marked the location of the tone. (Author/SBH)
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Language Processing, Research Projects
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Paul, Rhea – Journal of Child Language, 1985
Describes a study that examines the ability of children to identify given/new elements in passive and cleft forms in order to ascertain the relationship between syntactic and pragmatic acquisition. Results indicate that complete competence with these marked sentence forms does not occur universally until some time in adolescence. (SED)
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Comprehension, Language Processing
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Koff, Elissa; And Others – Journal of Psychology, 1980
Indicates a difference between animate/inanimate subjects and objects in reversible sentences. Suggests that animatedness may be an important variable in children's early comprehension of speech, and that the traditional definition of reversibility should be modified to clarify the effects of probability and animatedness. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Comprehension, Credibility, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
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Jennings, F.; Randall, B.; Tyler, L. K. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1997
Examined whether the preferences of verbs for appearing in particular subcategory structures can influence parsing and whether this influence is graded according to the strength of the preferences. Findings suggest that the verb subcategory preferences do produce a graded influence on the parse, according to their strength. (28 references)…
Descriptors: English, Language Processing, Models, Semantics
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Lempert, Henrietta – Journal of Child Language, 1988
Examines effect of training 70 preschool children with animate agent + animate patient sentences (AAV) or animate agent + inanimate patient sentences (IAV). Children were tested with noun-noun-verb (NNV) order sentence to assess whether AAV or IAV produced better comprehension. AAV and IAV showed comparable results at age three, IAV resulted in…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Processing, Language Proficiency, Preschool Children
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Gorrell, Paul – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1993
Recent investigations of filler-gap dependencies in sentence processing have assumed that the parser must compute an antecedent-trace relationship in which the trace site is identical to the canonical position of the moved phrase. Pickering and Barry's challenge to this view is refuted and a "direct association hypothesis" is suggested.…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Sentence Structure
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Gibson, Edward; Hickok, Gregory – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1993
Pickering and Barry's recent argument against the existence of empty categories (ECs) in human sentence processing is disputed. It is argued here that ECs may still play a linking role between thematic role assigners and wh-phrases. One possible parsing algorithm is given that accounts for Pickering and Barry's data. (28 references) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Sentence Structure
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Pickering, Martin – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1993
Papers by Gorrell and by Gibson and Hickok question Pickering and Barry's (PB) arguments against empty categories in sentence processing. This reply disputes Gorrell's claims that PB's interpretation of the data is inadequate and, in agreement with Gibson and Hickok, reinforces the arguments that the gap location is irrelevant to the formation of…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Sentence Structure
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McDaniel, Dana; Lech, Dorota – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2003
In this study, we focused on the formulation of relative clauses with preposition and genitive pied-piping. Thirty child (5;9 to 8;4) and 30 adult Polish speakers were given an elicited production task and a grammaticality judgment task. Almost all of the children accepted preposition pied-piping, but only half of them produced it. We suggest that…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Language Processing, Children, Adults
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Budiu, Raluca; Anderson, John R. – Cognitive Science, 2004
We present interpretation-based processing--a theory of sentence processing that builds a syntactic and a semantic representation for a sentence and assigns an interpretation to the sentence as soon as possible. That interpretation can further participate in comprehension and in lexical processing and is vital for relating the sentence to the…
Descriptors: Semantics, Language Processing, Linguistic Theory, Word Processing
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Saito, Satoru; Miyake, Akira – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
Four experiments examined the nature of forgetting and the processing--storage relationship during performance on a prevalent working memory task, the reading span test. Using two different presentation paradigms, Experiments 1 and 2 replicated Towse, Hitch, and Hutton's (1998, 2000) finding that the Short-Final lists, which presented a long…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Recall (Psychology), Reading Tests, Retention (Psychology)
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