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Showing 1 to 15 of 49 results Save | Export
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Long, Debra L. – Discourse Processes, 1994
Suggests that two components of natural discourse (pragmatic information and knowledge about discourse style) play a role in memory for the surface form of sentences in discourse. Shows that recognition memory increased as a function of information about the speaker's positive and negative attitudes and that substantial verbatim memory was…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Research
Friedenberg, Lisa – 1976
Three pairs of spatial antonyms (higher than/lower than, above/below, and rising away from/falling away from) were used in a task in which subjects judged whether a sentence accurately described a previously presented pictorial relationship. Subjects' reaction times were used as the dependent measure. Since all three word pairs were used…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Language Research, Models
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Brown, R. A. – Visible Language, 1991
Examines societies in which varieties and degrees of literacy are possible or ordinary, such as Japan and Korea. Finds that these societies have separate but functionally interrelated writing systems, used for communicatively disparate purposes, differential mastery of which, consequently, has social and economic repercussions. Finds that…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Cognitive Processes, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Hudson, Susan B.; And Others – 1982
Three experiments used "rhyme priming," a methodology in which lexical decisions to a visually presented word are facilitated when the word is preceded by a rhyming word, to investigate the access and maintenance of speech-based codes in sentence comprehension. In these experiments, the pairs were visually dissimilar rhymes, such as…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Language Processing, Language Research
Rabin, Jeffrey L.; Zecker, Steven G. – 1982
Reading researchers and theorists are sharply divided as to how meaning is obtained from the printed word. Three current explanations are that (1) meaning is accessed directly, without any intermediate processes; (2) meaning is accessed only through an intermediate phonemic stage; and (3) both direct access and phonemic mediation can occur. To…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Language Research, Learning Theories
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Kieras, David E. – Discourse Processes, 1981
Demonstrates that (1) in a theory of comprehension, global coherence must refer not just to the availability of a macrostructure, but also to its ease of construction; and (2) the topic-comment assignment at the sentence level can be an important influence on the reader's perception of the passage topic. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Coherence, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Singer, Murray – 1978
The study was designed to determine whether inferences about implied elements are drawn during sentence comprehension. A cued recall procedure was employed. It was argued, for example, that if one computes the use of a hammer when "the worker pounded the nail" is encountered, that "hammer" should effectively cue the recall of the sentence; while a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cues, Higher Education, Language Processing
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Newman, Denis; Bruce, Bertram C. – Discourse Processes, 1986
Uses an analysis of children's interpretations of a complex episode of social interaction to illustrate three features that distinguish them from robot plans and that form a basis for a theory of the development of social action: human plans (1) are social, (2) operate on interpretations, and (3) are used, not just executed. (FL)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Discourse Analysis
Rickman, David L.; Groth, Kenneth M. – 1994
A study examined the relative contributions of age, sex, and education to verbal and nonverbal fluency in a normal population. Sixty-seven subjects aged 12 to 71 years performed paper-and-pencil tasks proven to be dependent on the right and left hemispheric modalities of the frontal lobes. Multiple t-tests were applied to determine whether…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Correlation, Educational Background
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Crookes, Graham – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 1989
Reports on an experiment in which 2 groups of 20 Japanese learners of English as a Second Language performed 2 monologic production tasks with and without time for planning. It was found that providing learners with time to plan their utterances results in interlanguage productions that are more complex. (64 references) (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Higher Education, Interlanguage
Scott, Ann Martin – 1978
Students learn, understand, and retain knowledge best when they discover it themselves. In the area of semantics, the study of how meaning is conveyed through language, explicit knowledge may appear to be obvious once it becomes conscious, but unless people are explicitly aware of their implicit knowledge and assumptions, they may be at their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Gibbs, Raymond W., Jr. – Discourse Processes, 1986
Describes the results of two studies indicating that people do not ordinarily process the complete literal or compositional interpretations of idiomatic expressions, and that people are automatically biased toward interpreting such language as idioms before deriving their intended literal meanings. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Figurative Language, Higher Education
Yanagida, Yuko – 1987
This study examines the object case markings "o" and "ga" in Japanese with respect to the degree of predictability. A speaker who assumes that the listener will have difficulty identifying the referent, tends to use a construction type that enables the listener to uniquely identify the referent. This notion of predictability is…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Form Classes (Languages)
Petrun, Craig J.; Belmore, Susan M. – 1981
A study examined cognitive processing differences between metaphoric and literal sentences. Thirty-three undergraduate students listened to 96 test sentences (including 48 fillers) that expressed 1 meaning in either a novel or frozen metaphorical or literal form: "The old couch was in love with its new slipcover" (novel), "The old couch was at…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Language Processing
Burton, John K.; Bruning, Roger H. – 1978
Thirty college undergraduates participated in a study of the effects of acoustic and visual interference on the recall of word and picture triads in both short-term and long-term memory. The subjects were presented 24 triads of monosyllabic nouns representing all of the possible combinations of presentation types: pictures, printed words, and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education, Language Processing
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