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Betz, Stacy K.; Stoel-Gammon, Carol – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2005
Error inconsistency is often cited as a characteristic of children with speech disorders, particularly developmental apraxia of speech (DAS); however, few researchers operationally define error inconsistency and the definitions that do exist are not standardized across studies. This study proposes three formulas for measuring various aspects of…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Error Patterns, Articulation (Speech), Developmental Delays
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
Wood, Eric – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2004
The history of mathematics is full of rich examples that can help students to see the place of the discipline within our cultural heritage. Valuable as this can be, it also has the unfortunate side-effect of making students think that all the math has already been done and they do not get a sense that the subject is dynamic and growing.…
Descriptors: Credit (Finance), Learning Activities, Mathematical Concepts, Error Correction
Singleton, Chris – Journal of Research in Reading, 2005
Thomson was the first of very few researchers to have studied oral reading errors as a means of addressing the question: Are dyslexic readers different to other readers? Using the Neale Analysis of Reading Ability and Goodman's taxonomy of oral reading errors, Thomson concluded that dyslexic readers are different, but he found that they do not…
Descriptors: Reading Ability, Oral Reading, Miscue Analysis, Dyslexia
Marty, Paul F. – Library Quarterly, 2005
This article offers an analysis of the process of error recovery as observed in the development and use of collections databases in a university museum. It presents results from a longitudinal case study of the development of collaborative systems and practices designed to reduce the number of errors found in the museum's databases as museum…
Descriptors: Museums, Databases, Colleges, Longitudinal Studies
Marchman, Virginia A.; Saccuman, Cristina; Wulfeck, Beverly – Brain and Language, 2004
In this study, 22 children with early left hemisphere (LHD) or right hemisphere (RHD) focal brain lesions (FL, n=14 LHD, n=8 RHD) were administered an English past tense elicitation test (M=6.5 years). Proportion correct and frequency of overregularization and zero-marking errors were compared to age-matched samples of children with specific…
Descriptors: English, Morphemes, Children, Neurological Impairments
Wilkie, Richard M.; Wann, John P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
During locomotion, retinal flow, gaze angle, and vestibular information can contribute to one's perception of self-motion. Their respective roles were investigated during active steering: Retinal flow and gaze angle were biased by altering the visual information during computer-simulated locomotion, and vestibular information was controlled…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Spatial Ability, Psychomotor Skills, Error Patterns
Brown, George; Quinn, Robert J. – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2006
An analysis of the 1990 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) found that only 46 percent of all high school seniors demonstrated success with a grasp of decimals, percentages, fractions and simple algebra. This article investigates error patterns that emerge as students attempt to answer questions involving the ability to apply…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Word Problems (Mathematics), Numbers, National Competency Tests
Jones, Todd C.; Bartlett, James C.; Wade, Kimberley A. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Conjunction errors occur when participants incorrectly identify as "old" novel test stimuli created by recombining parts of two study stimuli (parent items). Prior studies have reported that the conjunction error rate is higher when parent items are studied together than when they are studied apart (a parent proximity effect). In several…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Form Classes (Languages), Recognition (Psychology), Familiarity
Tang, Giang; Barlow, Jessica – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2006
There has been little or no research on Vietnamese phonological development, let alone on phonological disorders of Vietnamese-speaking children. The goal of this study is to evaluate the sound systems of monolingual Vietnamese-speaking children with phonological impairment. Independent and relational analyses of four children (ages 4;4 to 5;5)…
Descriptors: Monolingualism, Children, Phonology, Language Impairments
Fine, Philip; Berry, Anna; Rosner, Burton – Psychology of Music, 2006
This study investigated the role of concurrent musical parts in pitching ability in sight-singing, concentrating on the effects of melodic and harmonic coherence. Twenty-two experienced singers sang their part twice in each of four novel chorales. The chorales contained either original or altered melody and original (tonal) or altered (atonal)…
Descriptors: Music Reading, Singing, Familiarity, Pattern Recognition
Kessler, Jane; Van Ullen, Mary K. – Public Services Quarterly, 2006
A review of the help files in several major databases revealed that database vendors have begun including information on citing sources, which has the potential to be very useful to students. Surprisingly, 94% of the citation examples in the databases reviewed had errors. The average number of errors per example was 4.3. The citation help appears…
Descriptors: Databases, Vendors, Librarians, Error Patterns
Kromrey, Jeffrey D.; Rendina-Gobioff, Gianna – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2006
The performance of methods for detecting publication bias in meta-analysis was evaluated using Monte Carlo methods. Four methods of bias detection were investigated: Begg's rank correlation, Egger's regression, funnel plot regression, and trim and fill. Five factors were included in the simulation design: number of primary studies in each…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Meta Analysis, Monte Carlo Methods, Correlation
Nergard-Nilssen, Trude – Dyslexia, 2006
This study provides detailed descriptions of the reading impairments in four 10-year-old Norwegian children with dyslexia. In all four cases reading comprehension was well in advance of the children's slow and inaccurate word-recognition skills. Phonological decoding (as assessed by pseudohomophone and nonword reading) appeared relatively…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Phonemes, Dyslexia, Norwegian
Yerushalmi, Edit; Polingher, Corina – Physics Education, 2006
Often, students repeat the mistakes they have made in answering exam questions, even after classroom discussion of their errors. They do not appear to have "learned from their mistakes". One possible solution is to guide students through a more active process of addressing their mistakes. We will describe a classroom study focused on the…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Questioning Techniques, Error Patterns, Learning Strategies