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Peer reviewedFalk, Julia S. – College English, 1979
Draws implications for the teaching and learning of writing from the language acquisition of children, based on the contention that human capacities for acquiring language do not change qualitatively as people mature. (DD)
Descriptors: Child Language, Higher Education, Language Acquisition, Verbal Development
Peer reviewedChouinard, Michelle M.; Clark, Eve V. – Journal of Child Language, 2003
Examined whether there was negative evidence in adult reformulations of erroneous child utterances, and if so, whether children made use of that evidence. Findings show that adults reformulate erroneous utterances often enough for learning to occur. Children can detect differences between their own utterance and the adult reformulation and make…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedKidd, Evan – Journal of Child Language, 2003
Eisenberg (2002) presents data from an experiment investigating 3- and 4-year-old children's comprehension of restrictive relative clauses. From the results, she argues that children do not have discourse knowledge of the felicity conditions of relative clauses before acquiring the syntax of relativization. This article evaluates this conclusion…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Phrase Structure, Preschool Children
Peer reviewedTaatgen, Niels A.; Anderson, John R. – Cognition, 2002
Presents a hybrid ACT-R model that shows U-shaped learning of the English past tense without direct feedback, changes in vocabulary, or unrealistically high rates of regular verbs. Illustrates that the model can learn the default rule, even if regular forms are infrequent. Shows that the model can explore the question of why there is a distinction…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Cognitive Development, English
Peer reviewedThornton, Rosalind – Language Acquisition, 2002
Reanalyzes what the literature has taken to be children's productions of Gen subjects and argues that Gen subjects do not exist in child English. Suggests that what look like Gen subjects appear only in specific discourse contexts: contexts of contrastive focus or contexts of emphatic focus. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Child Language, English, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedValian, Virginia; Lyman, Casey – Journal of Child Language, 2003
Examined young children's acquisition of wh-questions. Children heard a wh-question and attempted to repeat it; a "talking bear" answered. The same format was used for two intervention sessions for children in a quasicontrol condition. Suggests very little input--if concentrated and varied and presented so the child attends to it and…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Linguistic Input, Preschool Children
Peer reviewedJohnston, Judith; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1990
Sixteen children, aged 7:8 to 9:10, learned 2 miniature languages differing in word order. Children found the Subject-Object-Verb language easier than the Verb-Subject-Object language; they also made more suffix errors and fewer word order errors in the Subject-Object-Verb language. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Cognitive Processes, Grammar
Peer reviewedHigginson, Roy – Journal of Child Language, 1990
Describes the CHILDES/BIB electronic bibliographic database, its contents, and its relationship to the CHILDES database. CHILDES is a depository of child language corpora and is the publisher of CHAT (a transcription manual) and CLAN (an electronic package for child language research). (GLR)
Descriptors: Bibliographic Databases, Child Language, Information Systems, Language Research
Peer reviewedBloom, Kathleen – Journal of Child Language, 1988
Study of how the verbal component of "babytalk" affected three-month-olds' (N=40) vocal qualities suggested that conversational turn-taking facilitated a speak-listen pattern of infant vocalizations and indicated that what adults "say" to infants influences what infants "say" in response. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Infants, Language Acquisition, Oral Language
Peer reviewedBanigan, Rae L.; Mervis, Carolyn B. – Journal of Child Language, 1988
Investigation into the relative effectiveness of four input strategies for two-year-olds' (N=56) category evolution found that the most effective strategy involved labelling an object and providing both a physical demonstration and a verbal description of important attributes. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Classification, Infants
Peer reviewedThornton, Rosalind – Language Acquisition, 1995
This article compares children's productions of wh-questions such as "who?" or "what?". Data were gathered using the technique of elicited production. (26 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Language Research, Oral Language
Peer reviewedMerriman, William E.; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1993
Relative importance of appearance and potential function in children's object naming was examined. First, 16 children, taught novel names for unfamiliar objects, had to decide whether these applied to items that resembled the training objects in appearance or potential function. Then the name training procedure was revised so that equal emphasis…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Research, Testing, Toddlers
Peer reviewedYoder, Paul J.; Davies, Betty – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1992
Two studies of the unintelligible speech of developmentally delayed children found that more intelligible child speech was found in routine than in nonroutine situations and that extracted utterances were more intelligible under context-information-present conditions. (35 references) (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Context Clues, Developmental Disabilities, Mutual Intelligibility
Peer reviewedEdwards, Jane A. – Journal of Child Language, 1992
Presents four principles for archive-based language research: maximum readability and minimum bias; consistent encoding for exhaustive computer search; systematic contrastiveness; and data comparability in elicitation, transcription and coding. Examples from existing computer archives illustrate these and other principles, and strategies are…
Descriptors: Child Language, Coding, Computers, Databases
Peer reviewedTyler, Ann A.; Edwards, Mary Louise – Journal of Child Language, 1993
Interaction between lexical acquisition and acquisition of initial voiceless stops (VSs) was studied in two normally developing children by acoustically examining token-by-token accuracy of initial VS targets in different lexical items. Tokens representing the emergence of accurate VS production were restricted to certain words, largely old words…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Child Language, Infants, Language Acquisition


