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Kraljic, Tanya; Samuel, Arthur G. – Cognition, 2011
Listeners rapidly adjust to talkers' pronunciations, accommodating those pronunciations into the relevant phonemic category to improve subsequent perception. Previous work has suggested that such learning is restricted to pronunciations that are representative of how the speaker talks (Kraljic, Samuel, & Brennan, 2008). If an ambiguous…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Learning Processes, Experiments, Speech Communication
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Dumay, Nicolas; Gaskell, M. Gareth – Cognition, 2012
Two experiments explored the consolidation of spoken words, and assessed whether post-sleep novel competitor effects truly reflect engagement of these novel words in competition for lexical segmentation. Two types of competitor relationships were contrasted: the onset-aligned case (such as "frenzylk"), where the novel word is a close variant of…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Vocabulary Development, Experiments, Word Recognition
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Katsos, Napoleon; Roqueta, Clara Andres; Estevan, Rosa Ana Clemente; Cummins, Chris – Cognition, 2011
Specific Language Impairment (SLI) is understood to be a disorder that predominantly affects phonology, morphosyntax and/or lexical semantics. There is little conclusive evidence on whether children with SLI are challenged with regard to Gricean pragmatic maxims and on whether children with SLI are competent with the logical meaning of quantifying…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Number Concepts, Language Impairments, Children
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Friedman, Ori; Neary, Karen R.; Burnstein, Corinna L.; Leslie, Alan M. – Cognition, 2010
When young children observe pretend-play, do they interpret it simply as a type of behavior, or do they infer the underlying mental state that gives the behavior meaning? This is a long-standing question with deep implications for how "theory on mind" develops. The two leading accounts of shared pretense give opposing answers. The behavioral…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Observation, Play, Theories
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Frank, Michael C.; Everett, Daniel L.; Fedorenko, Evelina; Gibson, Edward – Cognition, 2008
Does speaking a language without number words change the way speakers of that language perceive exact quantities? The Piraha are an Amazonian tribe who have been previously studied for their limited numerical system [Gordon, P. (2004). Numerical cognition without words: Evidence from Amazonia. "Science 306", 496-499]. We show that the Piraha have…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Language Universals, Internet, Numbers
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Goldstein, Louis; Pouplier, Marianne; Chen, Larissa; Saltzman, Elliot; Byrd, Dani – Cognition, 2007
In the past, the nature of the compositional units proposed for spoken language has largely diverged from the types of control units pursued in the domains of other skilled motor tasks. A classic source of evidence as to the units structuring speech has been patterns observed in speech errors--"slips of the tongue". The present study reports, for…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Oral Language, Speech Communication, Error Patterns
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Shintel, Hadas; Nusbaum, Howard C. – Cognition, 2007
Language is generally viewed as conveying information through symbols whose form is arbitrarily related to their meaning. This arbitrary relation is often assumed to also characterize the mental representations underlying language comprehension. We explore the idea that visuo-spatial information can be analogically conveyed through acoustic…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Motion, Speech, Sentences
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Corley, Martin; MacGregor, Lucy J.; Donaldson, David I. – Cognition, 2007
Everyday speech is littered with disfluency, often correlated with the production of less predictable words (e.g., Beattie & Butterworth [Beattie, G., & Butterworth, B. (1979). Contextual probability and word frequency as determinants of pauses in spontaneous speech. "Language and Speech, 22," 201-211.]). But what are the effects of disfluency on…
Descriptors: Listening Comprehension, Word Frequency, Speech Communication, Recognition (Psychology)
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Garrod, Simon; Doherty, Gwyneth – Cognition, 1994
Examines the influence of conversational interaction on language change. Described two experiments that contrast language coordination between speakers who interacted with the same partner and speakers who interacted with different partners in a maze game context. Suggests that the experiments illustrate how a community affects language change as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Group Discussion, Interpersonal Communication, Language Attitudes