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Peter T. Richtsmeier – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2025
A premise of statistical learning research is that learners attend to and learn the frequencies of co-occurring sounds in the input, or phonotactic sequences. Inherent to the concepts of both frequency and phonotactics is order, or the temporal arrangement of the relevant elements. Order is similarly inherent to statistical learning, yet the…
Descriptors: Phonology, Learning Processes, Language Acquisition, Adults
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Zach Ramon Fitzpatrick; Charlie Johnson; Susanne Rott – Unterrichtspraxis/Teaching German, 2025
Unlike English, which has broadly adopted the singular they and uses gender-neutral nouns for people, German lacks widely used or officially accepted non-binary nouns and pronouns. As a result, most German language teaching materials continue to reflect a cisnormative binary gender system. Research has demonstrated that limiting teaching materials…
Descriptors: German, Nouns, Language Usage, Sex Fairness
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Mohammad Ali Heidari-Shahreza – Discover Education, 2024
This manuscript, as a conceptual article and communication piece, offers insights into the pedagogy of play as a philosophy of education and a wide-ranging set of methods and techniques. It intends to encourage readers to invest (further) in playful learning in language learning. To this aim, playful learning is first problematized within language…
Descriptors: Play, Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Language Acquisition
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Binhuang Fu; Xinjun Zheng – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2025
This study employed a three-level meta-analytic approach to investigate the relationship between parental language input and children's language outcomes, as well as the moderating effects of relevant variables. The analysis incorporated 41 original studies, including 160 effect sizes, with a sample size of 5,563 children. Results from the random…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Language Acquisition, Correlation, Linguistic Input
Victor Almeida Rodrigues Gomes – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Given its complexity, abstractness, and central role in many logics, negation might be a conceptual accomplishment. Therefore, young children's gradual acquisition of negation words might be due to their undergoing a conceptual change that is necessary to represent logical meanings. However, it's also possible that expressing negation takes time…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Language Acquisition, Grammar, Reading Processes
Adeline R. Tan – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Hidden structure refers to the units of organization that a child cannot directly observe when they are learning language (e.g. phonemes, morpheme boundaries, URs, phrases). In this dissertation, I propose a novel computational model that learns hidden structures in-tandem with the grammar. My model consists of two Maximum Entropy sub-models that…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Models, Grammar, Speech Communication
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Elise Breitfeld; Jenny R. Saffran – Child Development, 2024
During word learning moments, toddlers experience labels and objects in particular environments. Do toddlers learn words better when the physical environment creates contrasts between objects with different labels? Thirty-six 21- to 24-month-olds (92% White, 22 female, data collected 8/21-4/22) learned novel words for novel objects presented using…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Toddlers, Physical Environment
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Albert Weideman – Educational Linguistics, 2024
Analogies of the juridical in the technical sphere allow conceptualizations of how our designs do justice to the language abilities being measured, facilitating improvement of the planned arrangements we make. Juridical anticipations within the technical sphere function on the norm side of the latter as requirements to correct aberrations in…
Descriptors: Accountability, Intervention, Design, Language Skills
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Chao Zhou; Maria João Freitas – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2025
Previous empirical research has shown that Portuguese children aged 4;0 to 6;0 are sensitive to the quality of stem-final vowels when acquiring the irregular plural forms of /l/-final words (acquisition order: plurals of /al, [epsilon]l, [Greek small reversed lunate sigma symbol]l, ul/ > plurals of /il/). This study presents a formal account of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Portuguese, Young Children, Language Acquisition
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Sedigheh Karimpour; Ehsan Namaziandost; Hossein Kargar Behbahani – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2025
As an integral part of dynamic assessment, computerized dynamic assessment (CDA) offers learners computer-assisted automated mediation. Accordingly, the possible efficacy of corrective feedback seems to be enhanced with new technologies, such as artificial intelligence tools, that offer automatic corrective feedback. Using technology-enhanced…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Feedback (Response), Language Acquisition, Electronic Learning
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Pablo E. Requena; Carla Contemori – First Language, 2025
Cross-linguistic research has shown that object which-questions are the hardest types of wh-questions for children to comprehend and are acquired late. The present study asks when Spanish Differential Object Marking (DOM), an early cue to object marking, is actively used to successfully comprehend object which-questions in Spanish-speaking…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Adults, Spanish
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Katherine S. White; Thomas St. Pierre; Elizabeth K. Johnson – Language Learning and Development, 2024
The acquisition of variation is a fundamental -- but poorly understood -- part of child language acquisition. We fully endorse Shin and Miller's call for us to recognize the importance of this core issue, and argue that our understanding could be further enriched by greater reliance on convergent methods. As such, we implore researchers to…
Descriptors: Language Variation, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Research Methodology
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Ferhat Karaman; Jill Lany; Jessica F. Hay – Cognitive Science, 2024
Infants are sensitive to statistics in spoken language that aid word-form segmentation and immediate mapping to referents. However, it is not clear whether this sensitivity influences the formation and retention of word-referent mappings across a delay, two real-world challenges that learners must overcome. We tested how the timing of referent…
Descriptors: Infants, Language, Language Skill Attrition, Word Recognition
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Masoud Jasbi; Akshay Jaggi; Eve V. Clark; Michael C. Frank – Journal of Child Language, 2024
What are the constraints, cues, and mechanisms that help learners create successful word-meaning mappings? This study takes up linguistic disjunction and looks at cues and mechanisms that can help children learn the meaning of "or." We first used a large corpus of parent-child interactions to collect statistics on "or" uses.…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Cues, Semantics, Young Children
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Thora Másdóttir; Barbara May Bernhardt; Joseph Paul Stemberger; Gunnar Ólafur Hansson – Journal of Child Language, 2024
The feature [+spread glottis] ([+s.g.]) denotes that a speech sound is produced with a wide glottal aperture with audible voiceless airflow. Icelandic is unusual in the degree to which [+spread glottis] is involved in the phonology: in /h/, pre-aspirated and post-aspirated stops, voiceless fricatives and voiceless sonorants. The ubiquitousness of…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Speech, Young Children, Phonology
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