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Showing 1,066 to 1,080 of 1,542 results Save | Export
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Frank, Robert – Cognition, 1998
Demonstrates that an understanding of children's language-acquisition difficulties with a wide range of syntactic constructions should be derived from limitations on the child's ability to deal with processing load and formal representational complexity. Maintains this can be done only in the context of a view of syntactic representation…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Child Language, Grammar, Individual Development
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Reuterskiold-Wagner, Christina; Sahlen, Birgitta; Nyman, Angelique – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2005
By looking at data on expressive phonology, non-word repetition, non-word discrimination and phonological sensitivity in two groups of Swedish children, the common basis for tasks tapping into different levels of phonological processing is discussed. Two studies were performed, one including children with language impairment (LI) and one including…
Descriptors: Scoring, Phonemes, Identification, Preschool Children
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Baauw, Sergio; Cuetos, Fernando – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2003
It is well known that English and Dutch children often allow pronouns to refer to local ccommanding antecedents, the so-called Principle B Delay. A similar observation has been made for English agrammatics. This phenomenon, which we call the Pronoun Interpretation Problem (PIP), has been argued to be due to children's and agrammatics' difficulties…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Spanish, Pragmatics, Language Acquisition
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Newman, Rochelle; Ratner, Nan Bernstein; Jusczyk, Ann Marie; Jusczyk, Peter W.; Dow, Kathy Ayala – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Two studies examined relationships between infants' early speech processing performance and later language and cognitive outcomes. Study 1 found that performance on speech segmentation tasks before 12 months of age related to expressive vocabulary at 24 months. However, performance on other tasks was not related to 2-year vocabulary. Study 2…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Vocabulary
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Reali, Florencia; Christiansen, Morten H. – Cognitive Science, 2005
The poverty of stimulus argument is one of the most controversial arguments in the study of language acquisition. Here we follow previous approaches challenging the assumption of impoverished primary linguistic data, focusing on the specific problem of auxiliary (AUX) fronting in complex polar interrogatives. We develop a series of corpus analyses…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Grammar, Sentence Structure, Stimulus Generalization
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Newman, Rochelle S.; German, Diane J. – Language and Speech, 2005
This study investigated how lexical access in naming tasks (picture naming, naming to open-ended sentences, and naming to category exemplars) might be influenced by different lexical factors during adolescence and adulthood. Participants included 1075 individuals, ranging in age from 12 to 83 years. Lexical factors examined included word frequency…
Descriptors: Oral Language, Language Processing, Age Differences, Adolescents
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Bascelli, Elisabetta; Barbieri, Maria Silvia – Journal of Child Language, 2002
This study assesses children's understanding of the Italian modal verbs "dovere" (must) and "potere" (may) in their dual function of qualification of the speaker's beliefs (epistemic modality) and behaviour regulation (deontic modality). 192 children and 60 adults participated in the experiment. Children aged 3;0 to 9;2 were presented with two…
Descriptors: Italian, Language Acquisition, Child Language, Verbs
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Sabbagh, Mark A.; Wdowiak, Sylwia D.; Ottaway, Jennifer M. – Journal of Child Language, 2003
Thirty-six three- to four-year-old children were tested to assess whether hearing a word-referent link from an ignorant speaker affected children's abilities to subsequently link the same word with an alternative referent offered by another speaker. In the principal experimental conditions, children first heard either an ignorant or a…
Descriptors: Young Children, Language Acquisition, Child Language, Language Processing
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Rogers-Adkinson, Diana L. – Behavioral Disorders, 2003
The author explores the language processing ability of children with emotional disorders who have preexisting language delays (ED/LA) to determine whether language difficulties in this population are internal biological features rather than due to environmental variables such as lack of language stimulation in the home. A comparison group…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Delayed Speech, Emotional Disturbances, Language Impairments
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Kurvers, Jeanne; Uri, Helene – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
This study explores the ability to access word boundaries of pre-school children, using an on-line methodology (Karmiloff-Smith, Grant, Sims, Jones, & Cockle (1996). "Cognition, 58", 197-219.), which has hardly been used outside English-speaking countries. In a cross-linguistic study in the Netherlands and Norway, four and…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Metalinguistics, Foreign Countries, Preschool Children
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Hendriks, Petra; Spenader, Jennifer – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2006
Data from child language comprehension show that children make errors in interpreting pronouns as late as age 6;6 yet correctly comprehend reflexives from the age of 3;0. On the other hand, data from child language production show that children correctly produce both pronouns and reflexives from the age of 2 or 3. Current explanations of this…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Child Language, Form Classes (Languages), Interpretive Skills
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Serratrice, Ludovica – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2007
This study reports the results of a picture verification task assessing the interpretation of intra-sentential anaphora and cataphora in Italian by a group of English-Italian bilingual eight-year-olds, a group of age-matched Italian monolinguals, and a group of Italian monolingual adults. No significant differences between the groups were observed…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Monolingualism, Bilingualism, Transfer of Training
Gerken, LouAnn – 1990
A discussion of English-speaking children's use of subjectless sentences contrasts the competence and performance explanations for the phenomenon. In particular, it reviews evidence indicating that the phenomenon does not reflect linguistic competence, but rather performance constraints. A tentative model of children's production is presented…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
Welch, Alicia J.; Maxon, Antonia B. – 1983
The paper examines ways in which language complexity of the stimulus and language ability of the receivers may influence learning via television for hearing impaired and hearing children. Research is reviewed on the impact of language abstraction on learning from television, and findings from paired associate learning trials are cited to suggest…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Auditory Perception, Comprehension, Hearing Impairments
Lempert, Henrietta – 1989
Many researchers now believe that the representations and processes underlying syntactical development are specific to a "language faculty." If so, reference animacy would not be expected to influence acquisition of linguistic structures such as the passive sentence construction. Specifically, children should be comparably able to…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Language Research
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