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Tincoff, Ruth; Seidl, Amanda; Buckley, Lauren; Wojcik, Christa; Cristia, Alejandrina – Language Learning and Development, 2019
Touch cues might facilitate infants' early word comprehension and explain the early understanding of body part words. Parents were instructed to teach their infants, 4- to 5-month-olds or 10- to 11-month-olds, nonce words for body parts and a contrast object. Importantly, they were given no instructions about the use of touch. Parents…
Descriptors: Infants, Cues, Human Body, Comprehension
Goodrich Smith, Whitney; Black, Alexis K.; Hudson Kam, Carla L. – Journal of Child Language, 2019
This study explores whether children can learn a structural processing bias relevant to pronoun interpretation from brief training. Over three days, 42 five-year-olds were exposed to narratives exhibiting a first-mentioned tendency. Two characters were introduced, and the first-mentioned was later described engaging in a solo activity. In our…
Descriptors: Young Children, Child Language, Training, Form Classes (Languages)
Martins, Ana Teresa; Faísca, Luís; Vieira, Helena; Gonçalves, Gabriela – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2019
Studies addressing the recognition of emotions in blind or deaf participants have been carried out only with children and adolescents. Due to these age limits, such studies do not clarify the long-term effects of vision and hearing disabilities on emotion recognition in adults. We assessed the ability to recognize basic emotions in 15 deaf adults…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Deafness, Blindness, Adults
Sachi Oshima – Reading in a Foreign Language, 2024
The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of a multimodal approach in which an additional camera was used to deliver online explicit reading strategy instruction. Targeting 20 Japanese beginner-level EFL college students taking online Zoom lessons during one academic semester, two research questions were investigated: (a) To what…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Multimedia Materials, Student Attitudes
Catarina Wahlgren; Katerina Pia Günter – Gender and Education, 2024
Photographs of children are used on a daily basis in Swedish preschool practice. Although the preschool curriculum prescribes gender equality and celebration of diversity, photographs of indoor activities have shown to display a homogenous view of children and an emphasis on masculine-coded productions and accomplishments. This article examines…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries, Self Concept, Environment
Yu, Di; Tadic, Nadja – Working Papers in Applied Linguistics & TESOL, 2018
Visual conduct, including the use of gaze to attend to bodily-visual cues and other semiotic resources in interaction, has long been a topic of interest in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis (EMCA). Past EMCA work has examined visual conduct in face-to-face interaction, shedding light on the use of gaze to secure recipiency, facilitate…
Descriptors: Web Based Instruction, Seminars, Cues, Nonverbal Communication
Lutzenberger, Hannah – Sign Language Studies, 2018
Name signs are based on descriptions, initialization, and loan translations. Nyst and Baker (2003) have found crosslinguistic similarities in the phonology of name signs, such as a preference for one-handed signs and for the head location. Studying Kata Kolok (KK), a rural sign language without indigenous fingerspelling, strongly suggests that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sign Language, Rural Areas, Nonverbal Communication
Puupponen, Anna – Sign Language Studies, 2018
This article discusses a study of the relationship between movements of the head and the torso in Finnish Sign Language (FinSL). It describes the differences and similarities in the articulation of these two body parts in FinSL narratives, and discusses the status and relationship of the head and the torso as articulators in sign languages. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Deafness, Sign Language, Human Body
Maddox, Bryan – Quality Assurance in Education: An International Perspective, 2018
Purpose: This paper aims to investigate small-scale, qualitative observations of interviewer-respondent interaction in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC). Design/methodology/approach: The paper uses video-ethnographic methods to document talk and…
Descriptors: Interviews, International Assessment, Interaction, Interpersonal Relationship
Gallagher, Shaun – Educational Theory, 2018
On an enactivist conception of cognition, the unit of explanation is not just the brain, not just the body, and not just the environment, but the body--brain--environment understood as a dynamically coupled structure or gestalt. On this view, referencing Viktor von Weizsäcker's metaphor of the gestalt circle (Gestaltkreis), the brain is not in the…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Brain, Human Body, Interaction
Kocab, Annemarie; Lam, Hannah; Snedeker, Jesse – Cognitive Science, 2018
A well-known typological observation is the dominance of subject-initial word orders, SOV and SVO, across the world's languages. Recent findings from gestural language creation paradigms offer possible explanations for the prevalence of SOV. When asked to gesture transitive events with an animate agent and inanimate patient, gesturers tend to…
Descriptors: Word Order, Nonverbal Communication, Hypothesis Testing, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
Fort, Mathilde; Ayneto-Gimeno, Alba; Escrichs, Anira; Sebastian-Galles, Nuria – Language Learning, 2018
To probably overcome the challenge of learning two languages at the same time, infants raised in a bilingual environment pay more attention to the mouth of talking faces than same-age monolinguals. Here we examined the consequences of such preference for monolingual and bilingual infants' ability to perceive nonspeech information coming from the…
Descriptors: Infants, Bilingualism, Monolingualism, Human Body
Conte, Stefania; Brenna, Viola; Ricciardelli, Paola; Turati, Chiara – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2018
A large body of research has investigated both the emotional elaboration of facial stimuli in adults and the development of children's recognition of emotional expressions. Yet, it is still not clear whether children's ability to recognize an emotional face may be modulated by prior exposure to a different face, and whether an emotional expression…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Nonverbal Communication, Recognition (Psychology)
Miyake, Hidenori; Sugimura, Shinichiro – Infant and Child Development, 2018
We investigated the effect of age and directive words on children's ability to semantically integrate speech and iconic gesture. The participants were 132 children aged 4 to 6 years old. In the experiment, we presented messages of actions in 3 conditions (Verbal-only, Gesture-only, and Verbal-Gesture) in a serial manner to assess multimodal gain…
Descriptors: Young Children, Nonverbal Communication, Verbal Communication, Speech Communication
Walkington, Candace; Woods, Dawn; Nathan, Mitchell J.; Chelule, Geoffrey; Wang, Min – Grantee Submission, 2018
Gestures are associated with powerful forms of mathematical understanding. However, determining the causative role of gestures has been more elusive. In the present study, we inhibit students' gestures by restraining their hands, and examine how this impacts their problem-solving when presented with geometric conjectures to prove. We find no…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Mathematical Logic, Problem Solving, Geometry

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