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Fayol, Michel; Largy, Pierre; Hupet, Michel – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1999
Aims at demonstrating the gradual automatization of subject-verb agreement operation in young writers by examining developmental changes in the occurrence of agreement errors. Finds that subjects' performance moved from systematic errors to attraction errors through an intermediate phase. Concludes that attraction errors are a byproduct of the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, French
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Vihman, Marilyn May – International Journal of Bilingualism, 1999
Analysis of the first 4 months of word combinations recorded for an Estonian-English learning child suggests that meaning-based generativity may play a role in this important transition in that mixed language utterances, sequence reversals, and errors revealing early attempts at analysis provide clear evidence that distributional learning alone…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Contrastive Linguistics, English, Error Patterns
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Jiang, Nan – Applied Linguistics, 2000
Outlines a psycholinguistic model of vocabulary acquisition in a second language in an instructional setting. The model is based on an understanding of the representational characteristics of the second language lexicon. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Error Patterns, Language Processing, Models
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Drake, Carolyn; Palmer, Caroline – Cognition, 2000
This study investigated acquisition of music performance skills over 11 practice trials in novice and expert pianists differing in age, training, and sight-reading ability. The finding of a strong positive relationship between the mastery of temporal constraints and planning abilities within performance suggested that these two cognitive…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Lin, Yuh-Huey – Language Learning, 2001
Suggests another perspective in viewing the effect of style on English-as-a-foreign-language learners' errors. Suggests that for consonant clusters, what varies in accordance with style is the learners' choice of syllable simplification strategies rather than error rates. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Consonants, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
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Zemach, Dorothy – Essential Teacher, 2003
One English-as-a-Second-language teacher talks about the email messages she receives from her students, often filled with symbols and spelling and punctuation errors. Examines why such high-level, hardworking students write this way. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Electronic Mail, English (Second Language), Error Patterns
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May, Mark – Cognitive Psychology, 2004
Imaginal perspective switches are often considered to be difficult, because they call for additional cognitive transformations of object coordinates (transformation hypothesis). Recent research suggests that problems can also result from conflicts between incompatible sensorimotor and cognitive object location codes during response specification…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes, Perceptual Motor Learning, Perception
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Chrysikou, Evangelia G.; Weisberg, Robert W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Two experiments examined possible negative transfer in nonexperts from the use of pictorial examples in a laboratory design problem-solving situation. In Experiment 1, 89 participants were instructed to "think aloud" and were assigned to 1 of 3 conditions: (a) control (standard instructions), (b) fixation (inclusion of a problematic…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Protocol Analysis, Participant Characteristics, Design
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Hubner, Ronald; Volberg, Gregor – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
This article presents and tests the authors' integration hypothesis of global/local processing, which proposes that at early stages of processing, the identities of global and local units of a hierarchical stimulus are represented separately from information about their respective levels and that, therefore, identity and level information have to…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Theories, Hypothesis Testing, Predictor Variables
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Morrison, Gale M.; Peterson, Reece; O'Farrell, Stacy; Redding, Megan – Journal of School Violence, 2004
Perhaps the most "naturally occurring" data on school misbehavior and aggression are school discipline data, including office referrals, suspensions, and expulsion data. These data constitute the most common markers of school discipline status available on school campuses. There is, however, very little information available in professional or…
Descriptors: Campuses, Student Behavior, Expulsion, School Safety
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Clahsen, Harald; Aveledo, Fraibet; Roca, Iggy – Journal of Child Language, 2002
We present morphological analyses of verb inflections produced by 15 Spanish-speaking children (age range: 1;7 to 4;7) taken from longitudinal and cross-sectional samples of spontaneous speech and narratives. Our main observation is the existence of a dissociation between regular and irregular processes in the distribution of errors: regular…
Descriptors: Speech, Verbs, Child Language, Spanish Speaking
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Nation, Kate; Snowling, Margaret J.; Clarke, Paula – Journal of Child Language, 2005
Three experiments investigated the ability of eight-year old children with poor language comprehension to produce past tense forms of verbs. Twenty children selected as poor comprehenders were compared to 20 age-matched control children. Although the poor comprehenders performed less well than controls on a range of tasks considered to tap…
Descriptors: English, Foreign Countries, Comprehension, Semantics
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Ware, Elizabeth A.; Uttal, David H.; Wetter, Emily K.; DeLoache, Judy S. – Developmental Science, 2006
Prior research (DeLoache, Uttal & Rosengren, 2004) has documented that 18- to 30-month-olds occasionally make scale errors: they attempt to fit their bodies into or onto miniature objects (e.g. a chair) that are far too small for them. The current study explores whether scale errors are limited to actions that directly involve the child's…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Toys, Error Patterns, Young Children
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Gershkoff-Stowe, Lisa; Connell, Brenda; Smith, Linda – Journal of Child Language, 2006
Overgeneralization occurs when a child uses the wrong word to name an object and is often observed in the early stages of word learning. We develop a method to elicit overgeneralizations in the laboratory by priming children to say the names of objects perceptually similar to known and unknown target objects. Experiment 1 examined 18 two-year-old…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Language Processing, Language Acquisition, Young Children
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Abu-Rabia, Salim; Taha, Haitham – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
Most of the spelling error analysis has been conducted in Latin orthographies and rarely conducted in other orthographies like Arabic. Two hundred and eighty-eight students in grades 1-9 participated in the study. They were presented nine lists of words to test their spelling skills. Their spelling errors were analyzed by error categories. The…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Spelling, Phonology, Error Patterns
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