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Showing 346 to 360 of 402 results Save | Export
Hu, Min – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Phonological awareness (PA) is the ability to analyze spoken language into its component sounds and to manipulate these smaller units. Literature review related to PA shows that a variety of factor groups play a role in PA in Mandarin such as linguistic experience (spoken language, alphabetic literacy, and second language learning), item type,…
Descriptors: Test Format, Speech, Syllables, Oral Language
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Wiersema, Jan R.; van der Meere, Jacob J.; Roeyers, Herbert – Neuropsychologia, 2007
The aim of the study was to investigate the developmental trajectory of error monitoring. For this purpose, children (age 7-8), young adolescents (age 13-14) and adults (age 23-24) performed a Go/No-Go task and were compared on overt reaction time (RT) performance and on event-related potentials (ERPs), thought to reflect error detection…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Adolescents, Cognitive Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Vedora, Joseph; Stromer, Robert – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2007
Learning to spell on the computer may lead to functionally useful writing skills. Alan and Suzy, teenagers with developmental disabilities, were already proficient on a variety of naming and matching tasks but had difficulties spelling; Suzy also made errors reading orally. In Experiment 1, computer teaching led to new anagram and written spelling…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Spelling Instruction, Oral Reading, Developmental Disabilities
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Isurin, Ludmila; Ivanova-Sullivan, Tanya – Heritage Language Journal, 2008
The present paper looks at the growing population of Russian heritage speakers from a linguistic and psycholinguistic perspective. The study attempts to clarify further the notion of heritage language by comparing the linguistic performance of heritage speakers with that of monolinguals and second language learners. The amount of exposure to…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, Heritage Education, Task Analysis, Russian
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Ruffman, Ted; Slade, Lance; Carlos Sandino, Juan; Fletcher, Amanda – Child Development, 2005
Eight- to 12-month-olds might make A-not-B errors, knowing the object is in B but searching at A because of ancillary (attention, inhibitory, or motor memory) deficits, or they might genuinely believe the object is in A (conceptual deficit). This study examined how diligently infants searched for a hidden object they never found. An object was…
Descriptors: Infants, Object Permanence, Inhibition, Error Patterns
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Rispens, Judith; Been, Pieter – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2007
Background: Problems with subject-verb agreement and phonological (processing) skills have been reported to occur in children with specific language impairment (SLI) and in those with developmental dyslexia, but only a few studies have compared such problems in these two groups. Previous studies have claimed a causal relationship between…
Descriptors: Grammar, Phonology, Profiles, Hearing Impairments
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Rehfeldt, Ruth Anne; Dillen, Jeffrey E.; Ziomek, Megan M.; Kowalchuk, Rhonda K. – Psychological Record, 2007
Perspective-taking, or the ability to demonstrate awareness of informational states in oneself and in others, has been of recent interest in behavioral psychology. This is, in part, a result of a modern behavioral approach to human language and cognition known as Relational Frame Theory, which views perspective-taking as generalized operant…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Metacognition, Autism, Children
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Yeung, Nick; Botvinick, Matthew M.; Cohen, Jonathan D. – Psychological Review, 2004
According to a recent theory, anterior cingulate cortex is sensitive to response conflict, the coactivation of mutually incompatible responses. The present research develops this theory to provide a new account of the error-related negativity (ERN), a scalp potential observed following errors. Connectionist simulations of response conflict in an…
Descriptors: Conflict, Cognitive Processes, Computer Simulation, Brain
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Blote, Anke W.; Van Otterloo, Sandra G.; Stevenson, Claire E.; Veenman, Marcel V. J. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This study investigated the development of the many-to-one counting strategy in 4- year-old children. In the first experiment, 52 children participated. Their development with respect to two kinds of tasks, a hidden-items task and a needed-items task, was studied over four sessions. Children (n = 28) who accurately used the many-to-one strategy in…
Descriptors: Children, Investigations, Computation, Learning Strategies
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De Bruyn, Bart; Davis, Alyson – Developmental Science, 2005
When drawing real scenes or copying simple geometric figures young children are highly sensitive to parallel cues and use them effectively. However, this sensitivity can break down in surprisingly simple tasks such as copying a single line where robust directional errors occur despite the presence of parallel cues. Before we can conclude that this…
Descriptors: Cues, Young Children, Geometric Concepts, Spatial Ability
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Peter, Beate; Stoel-Gammon, Carol – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2005
Impaired speech prosody has been identified as a critical feature of suspected childhood apraxia of speech (sCAS). Lexical stress productions of children with sCAS have been characterized as 'excessive/equal/misplaced'. This investigation examines two potential explanations of this particular deficit, articulatory difficulty and impaired intrinsic…
Descriptors: Music, Children, Speech Impairments, Suprasegmentals
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Jiang, Nan – Language Learning, 2007
This study examined the development of integrated knowledge or automatic competence in adult SLA. Automatic competence was operationalized in terms of the participants' sensitivity to grammatical errors in a self-paced reading task. Their sensitivity was determined by observing whether there was a delay in reading ungrammatical sentences. Native…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Verbs, Sentences, Native Speakers
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Livingston, Kenneth R.; Andrews, Janet K. – Developmental Science, 2005
After learning to categorize a set of alien-like stimuli in the context of a story, a group of 5-year-old children and adults judged pairs of stimuli from different categories to be less similar than did groups not learning the category distinction. In a same-different task, the learning group made more errors on pairs of non-identical stimuli…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Young Children, Adults, Concept Formation
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Steinhauser, Marco; Hubner, Ronald – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The hypothesis is introduced that 1 source of shift costs is the strengthening of task-related associations occurring whenever an overt response is produced. The authors tested this account by examining shift effects following errors and error compensation processes. The authors predicted that following a specific type of error, called task…
Descriptors: Responses, Error Correction, Association (Psychology), Task Analysis
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Zollig, Jacqueline; West, Robert; Martin, Mike; Altgassen, Mareike; Lemke, Ulrike; Kliegel, Matthias – Neuropsychologia, 2007
Overview: Behavioural data reveal an inverted U-shaped function in the efficiency of prospective memory from childhood to young adulthood to later adulthood. However, prior research has not directly compared processes contributing to age-related variation in prospective memory across the lifespan, hence it is unclear whether the same factors…
Descriptors: Models, Semantics, Young Adults, Adolescents
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