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Friederici, Angela D.; Alter, Kai – Brain and Language, 2004
Spoken language comprehension requires the coordination of different subprocesses in time. After the initial acoustic analysis the system has to extract segmental information such as phonemes, syntactic elements and lexical-semantic elements as well as suprasegmental information such as accentuation and intonational phrases, i.e., prosody.…
Descriptors: Listening Comprehension, Language Processing, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Syntax
Dunn, Michelle A.; Bates, Juliana C. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2005
This study examined the development of neural processing of auditorally presented words in high functioning children with autism. The purpose was to test the hypothesis that electrophysiological abnormalities associated with impairments in early cortical processing and in semantic processing persist into early adolescence in autistic individuals.…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Children, Autism, Auditory Stimuli
Damian, Markus F.; Als, Lorraine C. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
A number of recent studies have found that objects are named more slowly in the context of same-category items than in the context of items from various semantic categories. Several experiments reported here indicated that this semantic effect is relatively persistent because it was essentially unaffected by the presence of interspersed filler…
Descriptors: Semantics, Context Effect, Language Processing, Lexicology
Mary Alt; Elena Plante; Marlena Creusere – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
This study examined the receptive language skills of young children (4-6 years old) with specific language impairment (SLI). Specifically, the authors looked at their ability to fast-map semantic features of objects and actions and compared it to the performance of age-matched peers with normally developing language (NL). Children completed a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Language Skills, Receptive Language, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
Setic, Mia; Domijan, Drazen – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2007
According to the spatial registration hypothesis, the representation of stimulus location is automatically encoded during perception and it can interact with a more abstract linguistic representation. We tested this hypothesis in two experiments, using the semantic judgements of words. In the first experiment, words for animals that either fly or…
Descriptors: Interaction, Animals, Visual Perception, Semantics
Bedny, Marina; Thompson-Schill, Sharon L. – Brain and Language, 2006
The present study characterizes the neural correlates of noun and verb imageability and addresses the question of whether components of the neural network supporting word recognition can be separately modified by variations in grammatical class and imageability. We examined the effect of imageability on BOLD signal during single-word comprehension…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Nouns, Verbs, Semantics
Brooks, Patricia J.; Sekerina, Irina – Language Acquisition, 2006
Errors involving universal quantification are common in contexts depicting sets of individuals in partial, one-to-one correspondence. In this article, we explore whether quantifier-spreading errors are more common with distributive quantifiers each and every than with all. In Experiments 1 and 2, 96 children (5- to 9-year-olds) viewed pairs of…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Grammar, Error Patterns
Van Petten, Cyma; Luka, Barbara J. – Brain and Language, 2006
Measures of electrical brain activity (event-related potentials, ERPs) have been useful in understanding language processing for several decades. Extant data suggest that the amplitude of the N400 component of the ERP is a general index of the ease or difficulty of retrieving stored conceptual knowledge associated with a word, which is dependent…
Descriptors: Semantics, Metabolism, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Language Processing
Plaut, David C.; Booth, James R. – Psychological Review, 2006
Plaut and Booth developed a distributed connectionist model of written word comprehension and evaluated it against empirical findings on individual and developmental differences in semantic priming in visual lexical decision. Borowsky and Besner raised a number of challenges for this model. First, the model was not shown to be capable of…
Descriptors: Models, Reading Comprehension, Individual Differences, Semantics
van den Brink, Danielle; Brown, Colin M.; Hagoort, Peter – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
An event-related brain potential experiment was carried out to investigate the temporal relationship between lexical selection and the semantic integration in auditory sentence processing. Participants were presented with spoken sentences that ended with a word that was either semantically congruent or anomalous. Information about the moment in…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Lexicology, Brain, Auditory Stimuli
Costa, Albert; Heij, Wido La; Navarrete, Eduardo – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2006
In this article we discuss different views about how information flows through the lexical system in bilingual speech production. In the first part, we focus on some of the experimental evidence often quoted in favor of the parallel activation of the bilinguals' two languages from the semantic system in the course of language production. We argue…
Descriptors: Speech, Semantics, Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language)
Hsiao, Janet Hui-wen; Shillcock, Richard – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
The complexity of Chinese orthography has hindered the progress of research in Chinese to the same level of sophistication of that in alphabetic languages such as English. Also, there has been no publicly available resource concerning the decomposition of Chinese characters, which is essential in any attempt to model the cognitive processes of…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Etymology, Semantics, Romanization
Mulligan, Neil W.; Lozito, Jeffrey P.; Rosner, Zachary A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Generation enhances memory for occurrence but may not enhance other aspects of memory. The present study further delineates the negative generation effect in context memory reported in N. W. Mulligan (2004). First, the negative generation effect occurred for perceptual attributes of the target item (its color and font) but not for extratarget…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Age Differences, Memory, Color
Ebeling, Karen S.; Gelman, Susan A. – 1990
Two studies investigated how flexible children are when asked to switch from one semantic interpretation to another. Three distinctly different standards for the adjectives "big" and "little" were examined: normative, perceptual, and functional. The first study looked at whether some standards are harder than others to represent and whether…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Hall, D. Geoffrey – 1990
Two studies addressed the relative strengths of object kind bias and syntactic knowledge in 2-year-olds' inductions of word meaning. The study looked at children's interpretations of novel proper names for familiar and unfamiliar objects. In each study, 10 children were assigned to each of 2 conditions (familiar and unfamiliar) and shown 2 cats…
Descriptors: Child Language, Induction, Language Acquisition, Language Processing

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