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Brown, D. L. – 1970
The effects of certain linguistic dimensions on auditory blending performance and training were examined. Dimensions included type of phonological context, consonant-vowel or vowel-consonant (CV or VC); units to be blended, syllables or phonemes (S or P); and size of units, single or double. Six ordered 96-word training blends were administered to…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Auditory Training, Child Language, Linguistic Performance
Peer reviewedHogaboam, Thomas W.; Perfetti, Charles A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1978
Three experiments examined the relationship between reading skill and decoding. Children decoded and matched words and pseudowords of different syllable lengths presented in both aural and printed form. Prior verbal experience was manipulated. Decoding differences were not wholly attributable to prior experience with word units, as processes…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Reaction Time, Reading Ability
Peer reviewedPerfetti, Charles A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1978
Vocalization latencies of young readers were a function of set size, number of syllables, and stimulus material. Differences between skilled and less skilled readers were absent for naming colors, digits, and pictures, but present for words; differences increased with number of syllables (and letters). Reading skill and decoding are discussed.…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Primary Education, Reaction Time, Reading Ability
Peer reviewedCamarata, Stephen; Lennard, Laurence B. – Journal of Child Language, 1986
Describes a study of young children's production of novel words serving as names of objects and actions, which were matched according to consonant and syllable structure. On each measure, accuarate production of new consonants was greater for the object words, possibly because action words have greater semantic complexity than object words. (SED)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Child Language, Comprehension, Consonants
Peer reviewedTreiman, Rebecca – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1985
Reports results of four experiments testing whether syllable structure affects children's performance in phonemic analysis tasks and in other reading related tasks. The experiments were motivated by theories that syllables consist of an onset (initial consonant or consonant cluster) and a rime (vowel and any following consonants). (AS/Author)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Children, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension
Intersensory Redundancy and Seven-Month-Old Infants' Memory for Arbitrary Syllable-Object Relations.
Gogate, Lakshmi J.; Bahrick, Lorraine E. – 1999
Seven-month-old infants require redundant information such as temporal synchrony to learn arbitrary syllable-object relations. Infants learned the relations between spoken syllables, /a/ and /i/, and two moving objects only when temporal synchrony was present during habituation. Two experiments examined infants' memory for these relations. In…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Child Language, Habituation, Infant Behavior
Desselmann, Gunther – Deutsch als Fremdsprache, 1970
Descriptors: Audiolingual Skills, Language Fluency, Language Instruction, Language Research
Peer reviewedDominguez, Alberto; de Vega, Manuel – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1997
Notes that, in Spanish, there is empirical support for the notion that, in visual word recognition, the syllables initially activate competing lexical candidates. Presents experiments intended to explore these inhibitory processes and discusses the applicability of the data to a dual-route model and the time course of syllabic processing. (55…
Descriptors: College Students, Data Analysis, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Peer reviewedTreiman, Rebecca; Zukowski, Andrea – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1996
Noting that in previous research, the linguistic status of the unit has often been confounded by its size, five experiments were conducted to provide a better test of the linguistic status hypothesis. Results supported the linguistic status hypothesis by indicating that effects of linguistic level on phonological sensitivity cannot always be…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Language Acquisition, Linguistic Competence
Peer reviewedTreiman, Rebecca; Cassar, Marie – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1996
Examines young children's ability to use simple morphological relations among words as a source of information about the words' spelling. Found that children used morphological relations among words only to a small extent. Suggests that although phonology plays an important role in early spelling, young children can also use other sources of…
Descriptors: Consonants, Elementary School Students, Emergent Literacy, Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedSansavini, Alessandra; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1997
Examined whether newborns were able to discriminate different stress patterns in multisyllabic stressed Italian words that varied both in consonants and in number of syllables. Found that newborns were sensitive to words' rhythm, as carried by stress patterns, and that this prosodic information was salient even in the presence of substantial…
Descriptors: Audiolingual Skills, Child Development, Cognitive Ability, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Peer reviewedLevey, Sandra; Schwartz, Richard G. – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2002
A study examined the ability of 10 two-year-olds to produce minimal pairs of novel trisyllabic words with primary stress on the first or second syllables. The syllables contained dissimilar or similar vowel contrasts to determine if segments affected omission. Omission was more frequent for the first syllable of weak-strong-weak word pairs.…
Descriptors: Child Language, Communication Disorders, Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedHoffman, Paul R.; Norris, Janet A. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1989
Analysis of spelling errors of 45 primary-school children needing reading and writing improvement found that a considerable proportion of errors involved both syllabic reduction and feature changes similar to those seen in normal speech development. A model is presented to account for the phonological simplifications seen in both speech and…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Error Analysis (Language), Models, Phonology
Peer reviewedFlege, James Emil – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1988
Ten mothers and 20 children, aged 5 and 10 years, were examined to determine the time at which velopharyngeal port opening began in /dVn/ syllables and velopharyngeal port closing reached completion in /nVd/ syllables. Adults and children nasalized most vowels in the /dVn/ context and the /nVd context. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Articulation (Speech), Child Language
Peer reviewedBenson, Bronwen – Language Learning, 1988
Error analysis of the informal conversations (in both the interlanguage [IL] and native language) of two native Vietnamese speakers gave limited support to the hypothesis that a universal preference for the open syllable is a shaping force in IL phonology that is independent of the process of native language transfer. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language), Interlanguage


