Results 251 to 260 of about 5,020 (278)
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Judgements of grammaticality in aphasia: The special case of Chinese

Aphasiology, 2000
Theories of agrammatism have been challenged by the discovery that agrammatic patients can make above - chance judgements of grammaticality. Chinese poses an interesting test of this phenomenon, because its grammar is so austere, with few obligatory features.
Ching-Ching Lu   +7 more
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Grammaticality judgements of mildly aphasic individuals under dual-task conditions

Aphasiology, 1997
Abstract This study examined the grammaticality judgements of mildly aphasic individuals under dual-task conditions in order to examine the relationship between syntactic processing and resource capacity and allocation in aphasia. Individuals with aphasia and age-matched control subjects performed a listening task that required grammaticality ...
Laura L. Murray   +2 more
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Phonetic Detail and Grammaticality Judgements

2008
This thesis investigates predictions of an exemplar account of syntax, by testing whether manipulating socially salient phonetic detail can alter the grammaticality judgements given to morpho-syntactic constructions in New Zealand English (NZE). Three experiments are were conducted as part of this thesis.
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EXPLICIT AND IMPLICIT JUDGEMENTS OF L2 GRAMMATICALITY

Language Learning, 1979
The present study examines the differential use of formal explicit knowledge and intuitive implicit knowledge in a second‐language grammatically judgement task. The hypothesis is that a set of conditions can be established which serve to identify the occasions in which each of these specialized types of knowledge will be used.
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What constrains grammatical gender effects on semantic judgements? Evidence from Portuguese

European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 2010
Four studies investigated whether grammatical gender biases the semantic judgements of Portuguese speakers, relative to speakers of English. Some research reports that grammatical gender has a pervasive influence on speakers' cognitive representations (e.g., Boroditsky, Schmidt, & Philips, 2003; Sera, Elieff, Forbes, Burch, & Rodriguez, 2002).
Ramos, S, Roberson, D
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An on-line study of grammaticality judgements in normal and aphasic speakers of Italian

Aphasiology, 1997
Abstract It has been widely argued that Broca's aphasics suffer from a loss of grammatical knowledge, accounting for the co-occurrence of expressive agrammatism (i.e. reduced, telegraphic speech with few inflections and function words) and specific problems with grammatical elements in sentence comprehensive. This idea is challenged by cross-linguistic
DEVESCOVI A   +6 more
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The effect of word transpositions on grammaticality judgements in first and second language sentence reading

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 2023
This study investigated the cross-language influence of a reader’s first language (L1, German) grammar knowledge on the syntactic processing of sentences in their second language (L2, English), using a grammaticality judgement task and comparing results with monolingual L1 English-speakers.
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Grammaticality judgements of children with and without language delay [PDF]

open access: possible, 2007
We examined the grammatical intuitions of children both with and without language delay, assessed via a task presented on computer. We targeted three grammatical structures often reported as compromised in children with language impairments (copula, articles and auxiliaries).
Saxton, Matthew   +3 more
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Single‐word semantic judgements in semantic dementia: Do phonology and grammatical class count?

Aphasiology, 2007
Background: Listeners make active use of phonological regularities such as word length to facilitate higher‐level syntactic and semantic processing. For example, nouns are longer than verbs, and abstract words are longer than concrete words. Patients with semantic dementia (SD) experience conceptual loss with preserved syntax and phonology.
Jamie Reilly   +3 more
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Comprehension and grammaticality judgement in Persian-speaking agrammatics.

2009
This thesis examined the performance patterns of two Persian-speaking agrammatic patients and ten normal, Persian-speaking controls in two experiments, one syntactic and the other morphological. The goal of the Syntactic Experiment was to assess the patients I sensitivity to various simple and complicated sentence structures, as well as to agreement ...
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