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Jarvinen-Pasley, Anna; Wallace, Gregory L.; Ramus, Franck; Happe, Francesca; Heaton, Pamela – Developmental Science, 2008
Theories of autism have proposed that a bias towards low-level perceptual information, or a featural/surface-biased information-processing style, may compromise higher-level language processing in such individuals. Two experiments, utilizing linguistic stimuli with competing low-level/perceptual and high-level/semantic information, tested…
Descriptors: Cues, Semantics, Autism, Language Processing
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Wiese, Holger; Schweinberger, Stefan R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Whether representations of people are stored in associative networks based on co-occurrence or are stored in terms of more abstract semantic categories is a controversial question. In the present study, participants performed fame decisions to unfamiliar or famous target faces (Experiment 1) or names (Experiment 2), which were primed, either by…
Descriptors: Semantics, Cognitive Processes, Semiotics, Reaction Time
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Van Damme, Ilse; d'Ydewalle, Gery – Brain and Cognition, 2008
Using a procedure of Hay and Jacoby [Hay, J. F., & Jacoby, L. L. (1999). "Separating habit and recollection in young and older adults: Effects of elaborative processing and distinctiveness." "Psychology and Aging," 14, 122-134], Korsakoff patients' capacity to encode and retrieve elaborative, semantic information was investigated. Habits were…
Descriptors: Semantics, Reaction Time, Patients, Memorization
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Jefferies, Elizabeth; Hoffman, Paul; Jones, Roy; Lambon Ralph, Matthew A. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
This study presents the first direct comparison of immediate serial recall in semantic dementia (SD) and transcortical sensory aphasia (TSA). Previous studies of the effect of semantic impairment on verbal short-term memory (STM) have led to important theoretical advances. However, different conclusions have been drawn from these two groups. This…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Phonology, Semantics, Dementia
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Lopez, Beatriz; Leekam, Susan R.; Arts, Gerda R. J. – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2008
This study aimed to test the assumption drawn from weak central coherence theory that a central cognitive mechanism is responsible for integrating information at both conceptual and perceptual levels. A visual semantic memory task and a face recognition task measuring use of holistic information were administered to 15 children with autism and 16…
Descriptors: Semantics, Autism, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
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Fabrice B. R. Parmentier – Cognition, 2008
Unexpected auditory stimuli are potent distractors, able to break through selective attention and disrupt performance in an unrelated visual task. This study examined the processing fate of novel sounds by examining the extent to which their semantic content is analyzed and whether the outcome of this processing can impact on subsequent behavior.…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Semantics, Attention, Recall (Psychology)
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Topolinski, Sascha; Strack, Fritz – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
People can intuitively detect whether a word triad has a common remote associate (coherent) or does not have one (incoherent) before and independently of actually retrieving the common associate. The authors argue that semantic coherence increases the processing fluency for coherent triads and that this increased fluency triggers a brief and…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Semantics, Grammar, Probability
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Bosshardt, Hans-Georg – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2006
The present paper integrates the results of experimental studies in which cognitive differences between stuttering and nonstuttering adults were investigated. In a monitoring experiment it was found that persons who stutter encode semantic information more slowly than nonstuttering persons. In dual-task experiments the two groups were compared in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Stuttering, Communication Research, Adults
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Heaton, Pamela; Williams, Kerry; Cummins, Omar; Happe, Francesca G. E. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2007
Whilst findings from experimental studies suggest that perceptual mechanisms underpinning musical cognition are preserved or enhanced in autism, little is known about how higher-level, structural aspects of music are processed. Twenty participants with autism, together with age and intelligence matched controls, completed a musical priming task in…
Descriptors: Semantics, Autism, Music, Cognitive Processes
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Campbell, Jamie I. D.; Metcalfe, Arron W. S. – Cognition, 2008
There is evidence for both semantic and asemantic routes for naming Arabic digits, but neuropsychological dissociations suggest that number-fact retrieval (2x3=6) can inhibit the semantic route for digit naming. Here, we tested the hypothesis that such inhibition should slow digit naming, based on the principle that reduced access to multiple…
Descriptors: Numbers, Reaction Time, Semantics, Subtraction
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Kucer, Stephen B.; Tuten, Jenny; Treacy, Kathleen M. – Literacy Research and Instruction, 2008
The debate over the extent to which individual letters are perceived by proficient readers continues to play a dominant role in the ongoing "reading wars." One view holds that virtually all letters are processed, the other view that only some letters are perceived, supplemented by context and background knowledge. There is little research,…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Reading Comprehension, Semantics, Miscue Analysis
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Rudner, Mary; Ronnberg, Jerker – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2008
The working memory model for Ease of Language Understanding (ELU) predicts that processing differences between language modalities emerge when cognitive demands are explicit. This prediction was tested in three working memory experiments with participants who were Deaf Signers (DS), Hearing Signers (HS), or Hearing Nonsigners (HN). Easily nameable…
Descriptors: Semantics, Short Term Memory, Language Processing, Prediction
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Zhang, Baoguo – College Student Journal, 2008
This essay mainly discusses the following issue: Do people from different cultures store English words in their minds in different ways; and what elements determine people's mental lexicon? The findings from my experiment showed that cultural factors only play a minor role on this stage. The leading dominants in this light are the linguistic…
Descriptors: Semantics, Dictionaries, Foreign Countries, Vocabulary Development
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Rueckl, Jay G.; Aicher, Karen A. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2008
Previous studies haves shown that under masked priming conditions, CORNER primes CORN as strongly as TEACHER primes TEACH and more strongly than BROTHEL primes BROTH. This result has been taken as evidence of a purely structural level of representation at which words are decomposed into morphological constituents in a manner that is independent of…
Descriptors: Semantics, Morphology (Languages), Priming, Language Processing
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Sato, Marc; Mengarelli, Marisa; Riggio, Lucia; Gallese, Vittorio; Buccino, Giovanni – Brain and Language, 2008
Recent neurophysiological and brain imaging studies have shown that the motor system is involved in language processing. However, it is an open question whether this involvement is a necessary requisite to understand language or rather a side effect of distinct cognitive processes underlying it. In order to clarify this issue we carried out three…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Semantics, Verbs, Neurology
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