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Aisling Mulvihill; Natasha Matthews; Paul E. Dux; Annemaree Carroll – Journal of Child Language, 2023
Private speech is a cognitive tool to guide thinking and behavior, yet its regulatory use in atypical development remains equivocal. This study investigated the influence of task difficulty on private speech in preschool children with attention or language difficulties. Measures of private speech use, form and content were obtained while 52…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, At Risk Persons, Task Analysis, Difficulty Level
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Nicoladis, Elena; Yang, Yuehan; Jiang, Zixia – Journal of Child Language, 2020
Learning to mark for tense in a second language is notoriously difficult for speakers of a tenseless language like Chinese. In this study we test two reasons for these difficulties in Chinese-English sequential bilingual children: (1) morphophonological transfer (i.e., avoidance of complex codas), and (2) interpretation of -"ed" as an…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Task Analysis, Morphemes, English (Second Language)
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Lin, Candise Y.; Wang, Min; Shu, Hua – Journal of Child Language, 2013
The current study examined five- and seven-year-old Mandarin-speaking children's processing of lexical tones in relation to speech segments by varying onset and rime in an oddity task (onset±rime±). Results showed that children experienced more difficulty in lexical tone oddity judgment when rimes differed across monosyllables (e.g.…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Intonation, Mandarin Chinese, Difficulty Level
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Sutton, Ann; Trudeau, Natacha; Morford, Jill; Rios, Monica; Poirier, Marie-Andree – Journal of Child Language, 2010
Children who require augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) systems while they are in the process of acquiring language face unique challenges because they use graphic symbols for communication. In contrast to the situation of typically developing children, they use different modalities for comprehension (auditory) and expression…
Descriptors: Sentences, Augmentative and Alternative Communication, Language Acquisition, Young Children