Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 4 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 43 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 128 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 510 |
Descriptor
| Language Processing | 1546 |
| Language Research | 1546 |
| Second Language Learning | 499 |
| Psycholinguistics | 422 |
| Language Acquisition | 416 |
| Linguistic Theory | 383 |
| Semantics | 266 |
| Cognitive Processes | 255 |
| Grammar | 248 |
| Syntax | 235 |
| Child Language | 216 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
Author
| Pisoni, David B. | 10 |
| Bialystok, Ellen | 6 |
| Clahsen, Harald | 6 |
| Costa, Albert | 6 |
| Harrington, Michael | 6 |
| Hopp, Holger | 6 |
| Frazier, Lyn | 5 |
| MacWhinney, Brian | 5 |
| Roberts, Leah | 5 |
| Studdert-Kennedy, Michael, Ed. | 5 |
| Cutler, Anne | 4 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 25 |
| Teachers | 25 |
| Researchers | 22 |
| Students | 1 |
| Support Staff | 1 |
Location
| Netherlands | 13 |
| Canada | 10 |
| Australia | 9 |
| Germany | 9 |
| China | 7 |
| France | 7 |
| Japan | 7 |
| United Kingdom | 6 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 5 |
| Brazil | 4 |
| Hong Kong | 4 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Peer reviewedWarren, Paul; And Others – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1995
Investigates the incidence of segmental and prosodic contrasts in recorded sentence materials and the use of such distinctions in the processing of utterances. The chosen materials involve sites of parsing ambiguity. Results show that in the immediate interpretation of spoken language input, intonational contrasts function as clear structural…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Ambiguity, Articulation (Speech), Auditory Perception
Peer reviewedTomasello, Michael; Akhtar, Nameera – Cognitive Development, 1995
Attempts to determine whether children can use social-pragmatic cues to determine "what kind" of referent, object, or action an adult intends to indicate with a novel word. Doubts that children assume that a novel word refers to whatever nameless object is present. Suggests that lexical acquisition rests fundamentally on children's…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infants, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
Peer reviewedGathercole, Virginia C. Mueller; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1995
Examines whether knowledge of functional properties of a referent for a new name influences children's first guesses about whether that name refers to an object or a substance. Suggests that children do not rely on a single source of information, but rather draw on various kind of information, including perceptual characteristics of the entities…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infants, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
Peer reviewedLardiere, Donna – Language in Society, 1992
Questions Bloom's (1984) assertion that, because the Chinese do not employ counterfactual conditionals, the Chinese have not developed a labeled cognitive schema that allows them to process counterfactuals "naturally" (as opposed to the English). It is demonstrated that Arabic contains a specific counterfactual marker, yet Arabic…
Descriptors: Arabic, Chinese, English, Interviews
Peer reviewedPinker, Stephen – Science, 1991
Focuses on a single rule of grammar to produce evidence of a memory system for language acquisition and processing that is modular; independent of real-world meaning; unaffected by frequency and similarity; sensitive to formal distinctions; more sophisticated than the explicitly-taught rules it subsumes; developed independently of ambient input;…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Diachronic Linguistics, Individual Differences, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedBaum, Shari R. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1993
Two experiments were conducted to explore processing of relative clause structures by normal elderly adults. Four groups of subjects (aged 20-29 years, 60-69 years, 70-79 years, and 80-89 years) participated in a lexical decision task and a sentence repetition task. (19 references) (VWL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Ability, Error Analysis (Language), Language Processing
Peer reviewedGiles, Howard; And Others – Research on Language and Social Interaction, 1993
A research study is reported that studied (1) the effect of respondents' chronological age on attitudes toward patronizing speech directed at the institutionalized elderly and (2) the prevalence of and understanding of patronizing speech toward noninstitutionalized elderly individuals. (36 references) (LB)
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Attitude Measures, Institutionalized Persons, Language Processing
Peer reviewedEvey, Julie A.; Merriman, William E. – Journal of Child Language, 1998
While children aged 1;10 and 2;1 show only a modest rate of mapping novel nouns onto unfamiliar rather than familiar objects, children aged 1;4 and 1;8 show a high rate. Two studies with young 2-year olds found the noun-mapping preference prevalent, but unless initial choices are strongly reinforced, increase in salience of familiar kinds lures…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Mapping, Error Patterns, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedMaas, Fay K.; Abbeduto, Leonard – Journal of Child Language, 1998
A study of 5-year olds' ability to distinguish promises from predictions was suspected to have achieved its results due to methodological problems. A similar study with 32 children ages 5 to 6 that used several variations of the previous study's procedures was found to have similar results, suggesting the earlier findings were an accurate…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Intellectual Development, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedLee, James F. – Modern Language Journal, 1998
A study investigated the effects of varying the morphological characteristics of input on comprehension and input processing. Nine targeted subjunctive verbs in a text were substituted with infinitives and a nonsense morpheme. Passage comprehension, measured by recall, was significantly lower for the correct, subjunctive forms than for incorrect…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Input, Morphology (Languages)
Peer reviewedMoss, Helen E.; McCormick, Samantha F.; Tyler, Lorraine K. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1997
Investigated the time course of activation of the mental representations of word meanings in a series of three cross-modal priming experiments. The study interprets the data with respect to both localist and distributed implementations of the cohort model. Results indicate that if early competition among simultaneously activated meanings exists,…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Error Analysis (Language), Language Processing, Language Research
Peer reviewedBerndt, Rita Sloan; And Others – Cognition, 1996
Investigated the source of agrammatic aphasic patients' difficulty comprehending semantically reversible sentences. Found approximately equal distributions of three distinct patterns. Results conflict with explanations of comprehension failure which state that a single pattern of performance on sentence structures characterizes comprehension of…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Grammar
Peer reviewedBatstone, Rob – Language Awareness, 2002
Argues that in the initial stages of learning a new form in a foreign language and its associated functions, communicative needs and learning needs are fundamentally opposed. Suggests that what is needed is an orientation to language that is based on prior familiarity with specific forms and meaning that can be used in discourse as anchors to…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Discourse Modes, Grammar, Language Processing
Peer reviewedWeismer, Susan Ellis; Plante, Elena; Jones, Maura; Tomblin, Bruce J. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
This study used neuroimaging and behavioral techniques to examine the claim that processing capacity limitations underlie specific language impairment (SLI). Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to investigate verbal working memory in adolescents with SLI and normal language (NL) controls. The experimental task involved a modified…
Descriptors: Verbal Ability, Word Recognition, Memory, Language Processing
Borowsky, Ron; Besner, Derek – Psychological Review, 2006
D. C. Plaut and J. R. Booth presented a parallel distributed processing model that purports to simulate human lexical decision performance. This model (and D. C. Plaut, 1995) offers a single mechanism account of the pattern of factor effects on reaction time (RT) between semantic priming, word frequency, and stimulus quality without requiring a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Models, Word Recognition, Visual Learning

Direct link
