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Showing 76 to 90 of 425 results Save | Export
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Smith, Linda; Yu, Chen – Cognition, 2008
First word learning should be difficult because any pairing of a word and scene presents the learner with an infinite number of possible referents. Accordingly, theorists of children's rapid word learning have sought constraints on word-referent mappings. These constraints are thought to work by enabling learners to resolve the ambiguity inherent…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Infants, Vocabulary Development, Word Recognition
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Kachergis, George; Yu, Chen; Shiffrin, Richard M. – Cognitive Science, 2017
Prior research has shown that people can learn many nouns (i.e., word--object mappings) from a short series of ambiguous situations containing multiple words and objects. For successful cross-situational learning, people must approximately track which words and referents co-occur most frequently. This study investigates the effects of allowing…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Linguistic Theory, Context Effect, Familiarity
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Campbell, Jennifer; Mihalicz, Patrick; Thiessen, Erik; Curtin, Suzanne – Developmental Psychology, 2018
English-learning infants attend to lexical stress when learning new words. Attention to lexical stress might be beneficial for word learning by providing an indication of the grammatical class of that word. English disyllabic nouns commonly have trochaic (strong-weak) stress, whereas English disyllabic verbs commonly have iambic (weak-strong)…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Nouns, Infants, English
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Tsang, Yiu-Kei; Chen, Hsuan-Chih – Journal of Memory and Language, 2013
In three priming experiments, we investigated whether the meanings of ambiguous morphemes were activated during word recognition. Using a meaning generation task, Experiment 1 demonstrated that the dominant meaning of individually presented ambiguous morphemes was reported more often than did other less frequent meanings. Also, participants tended…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Priming, Word Recognition, Morphology (Languages)
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Lu, Aitao; Zhang, John X. – Neuropsychologia, 2012
Among different types of metaphors, lexical metaphors are special in that they have been highly lexicalized and often suggested to be processed like non-metaphorical words. The present study examined two types of Chinese metaphorical words which are conceptualized through body parts. One has both a metaphorical meaning and a literal meaning…
Descriptors: Evidence, Semantics, Figurative Language, Experiments
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Rodd, Jennifer M.; Johnsrude, Ingrid S.; Davis, Matthew H. – Brain and Language, 2010
Neuroimaging studies have shown that the left inferior frontal gyrus (LIFG) plays a critical role in semantic and syntactic aspects of speech comprehension. It appears to be recruited when listeners are required to select the appropriate meaning or syntactic role for words within a sentence. However, this region is also recruited during tasks not…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Sentences, Semantics, Figurative Language
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Jarvikivi, Juhani; Pyykkonen, Pirita; Niemi, Jussi – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
The authors compared sublexical and supralexical approaches to morphological processing with unambiguous and ambiguous inflected words and words with ambiguous stems in 3 masked and unmasked priming experiments in Finnish. Experiment 1 showed equal facilitation for all prime types with a short 60-ms stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) but significant…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Figurative Language, Language Processing, Comparative Analysis
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Zipke, Marcy – Reading Teacher, 2008
New evidence shows that some types of metalinguistic awareness could be important for reading comprehension in much the same way that phonemic awareness is important for learning to decode. In a recent study, students between 7 and 9 years old were taught to manipulate language and understand the multiple meanings of ambiguous words and sentences.…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Metalinguistics, Figurative Language, Elementary School Students
Simpson, Greg B. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1981
Describes two experiments on the processing of ambiguous words: one involving lexical decisions for words related to dominant or subordinate meanings of homograph primes, the other involving ambiguous words ending sentences that bias the homographs at varying degrees. Concludes that dominance and context contribute independently to processing of…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Association (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Context Effect
Johnson, Benjamin Luke – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Much of the world's knowledge is encoded in natural language. Accessing this information would be invaluable for applications such as agent systems, question answering, the semantic web, expert systems, and many more. However, language is very ambiguous--each word in a natural language utterance can have a variety of meanings. Word sense…
Descriptors: Natural Language Processing, Ambiguity (Semantics), Inferences, Semantics
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Pritchard, Stephen C.; Coltheart, Max; Marinus, Eva; Castles, Anne – Cognitive Science, 2018
The self-teaching hypothesis describes how children progress toward skilled sight-word reading. It proposes that children do this via phonological recoding with assistance from contextual cues, to identify the target pronunciation for a novel letter string, and in so doing create an opportunity to self-teach new orthographic knowledge. We present…
Descriptors: Computation, Models, Independent Study, Reading
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Kodelja, Zdenko – Policy Futures in Education, 2023
Slogans in education have been the subject of critical analysis -- at least in the context of philosophy of education -- for more than half a century. Some of these slogans are no longer relevant or frequently used, while their analyses and explanations are still an appropriate theoretical basis for understanding new educational slogans. One of…
Descriptors: Communication Strategies, Rhetoric, Educational Philosophy, Discourse Analysis
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Schvaneveldt, Roger W.; And Others – 1974
Two major hypotheses are currently at issue concerning the effects of semantic context on ambiguous word recognition: (1) the selective-retrieval hypothesis (SRH) maintains that a single meaning is retrieved from memory, and (2) the nonselective-retrieval hypothesis maintains that all meanings are retrieved from memory. To help clear up this…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Decoding (Reading)
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Zamuner, Tania S.; Fais, Laurel; Werker, Janet F. – Developmental Science, 2014
A central component of language development is word learning. One characterization of this process is that language learners discover objects and then look for word forms to associate with these objects (Mcnamara, 1984; Smith, 2000). Another possibility is that word forms themselves are also important, such that once learned, hearing a familiar…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Word Recognition, Associative Learning
Yee, Penny L. – 1986
This study investigates the role of specific inhibitory processes in lexical ambiguity resolution. An attentional view of inhibition and a view based on specific automatic inhibition between nodes predict different results when a neutral item is processed between an ambiguous word and a related target. Subjects were 32 English speakers with normal…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Processes, Inhibition
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