21,369 results on '"linguistics"'
Search Results
2. Echoes of Intelligence.
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VIDELA, ALVARO
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LANGUAGE models , *LINGUISTICS , *SEMANTICS , *INTERPRETATION (Philosophy) , *INTENTION , *AUTHORS - Abstract
This article focuses on the aspect of textual interpretation in a large language model (LLM). The author cites works by a variety of authors to explain how an LLM works, including Angela Friederici’s two types of semantic representations, Umberto Eco’s works on semantic interpretation and reader’s codes to obtain meaning from text, and Jean-François Lyotard’s definitions for utterances defined by rules. Topics also discussed include the role of the LLM reader and how to build one.
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- 2023
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3. Designing a Framework for Conversational Interfaces: Combining the latest advances in machine learning with earlier approaches.
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TELLMAN, ZACHARY
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CHATBOTS , *MACHINE learning , *LINGUISTICS , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence - Abstract
This article investigates the creation of a conversational interface framework, in development at Semantic Machines, with the intent of expanding the usage of conversational interfaces. The article starts with a historical look at conversational agents including Terry Winograd’s SHRDLU and then goes on to describe the new framework with a look at utterances, also called plans, as well as constraints and revision.
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- 2023
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4. Language patterns and sentiment expressions of post-covid patients in social media: A machine learning perspective.
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Roja, S. and Durairaj, M.
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LINGUISTICS , *COVID-19 pandemic , *MACHINE learning , *SENTIMENT analysis , *SOCIAL media , *MENTAL illness , *USER-generated content - Abstract
Depression is a mental health disorder that affects a significant portion of the population. According to recent statistics, an estimated 3.8% of the population experiences depression, including 5% of adults. The traditional methods of detecting depression, such as face-to-face interviews, have limitations and are not always effective. However, social media sentiment analysis has the potential to identify people at risk of depression. In this essay, we will discuss the prevalence of depression in society, the limitations of traditional methods for detecting depression, the potential of social media for depression detection, the challenges of analyzing social media sentiment for depression detection, and the effectiveness of social media sentiment analysis for depression detection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Using Parent Report to Measure Vocabulary in Young Bilingual Children: A Scoping Review.
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Weisleder, Adriana, Friend, Margaret, Mei Tsui, Angeline Sin, and Marchman, Virginia A.
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LANGUAGE & languages , *BILINGUALISM in children , *MONOLINGUALISM , *VOCABULARY , *LINGUISTICS - Abstract
A large number of children are exposed to more than one language. One well-established method of assessing early vocabulary development in monolingual children is parent report; however, its use in bilingual/multilingual contexts is less established and brings unique challenges. In this methodological scoping review, we reviewed studies of early vocabulary development using parent report with bilingual/multilingual children (January 1980–March 2022). A total of 576 articles were screened, yielding 101 studies for analysis. The number of studies on bilingual/multilingual vocabulary has grown in the last two decades; yet representation of the world’s languages remains sparse. The majority of studies assessed bilingual/multilingual children’s vocabulary in each language and used instruments adapted for linguistic and cultural characteristics. However, the field could benefit from standardized reporting practices regarding definitions of bi/multilingualism, selection of reporters, and tool development and is in critical need of studies that develop, validate, and norm parent report instruments specifically for the bilingual/multilingual case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Phonetic and Lexical Crosslinguistic Influence in Early Spanish–Basque–English Trilinguals.
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Stoehr, Antje, Jevtović, Mina, de Bruin, Angela, and Martin, Clara D.
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MULTILINGUALISM , *LANGUAGE & languages , *LINGUISTICS , *SPANISH language , *LEXICAL phonology - Abstract
A central question in multilingualism research is how multiple languages interact. Most studies have focused on first (L1) and second language (L2) effects on a third language (L3), but a small number of studies dedicated to the opposite transfer direction have suggested stronger L3 influence on L2 than on L1 in postpuberty learners. In our study, we provide further support for stronger L3-to-L2 than L3-to-L1 influence and show that it extends to (a) phonetics and the lexicon and (b) childhood learners. Fifty Spanish–Basque–English trilingual adults who had acquired Spanish from birth and Basque between 2 to 4 years of age through immersion participated in a speeded trilingual switching task measuring production of voice onset time and lexical intrusions. Participants experienced more phonetic and lexical crosslinguistic influence from L3 English during L2-Basque production than during L1-Spanish production. These findings show that even highly proficient early bilinguals experience differential influence from a classroom-taught L3 to L1 and to L2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Measuring Teenage Learners’ Automatized, Explicit, and/or Implicit Knowledge: A Question of Context?
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Schurz, Alexandra
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ENGLISH language , *LANGUAGE awareness , *LEARNING , *LANGUAGE & languages , *LINGUISTICS - Abstract
The present study administered six test instruments to 13- to 14-year-old learners of English in Austria and Sweden (N = 213), countries offering settings with more explicit and implicit learning environments, respectively. Confirmatory Factor Analyses for Austria yielded a factor comprising timed grammaticality judgment tests, an oral narrative test, and elicited imitation, labelled in this study Automatized and/or Implicit Knowledge, and a factor including an untimed grammaticality judgment test and a metalinguistic knowledge test, named in this study Explicit Knowledge. In the Swedish context, goodness-of-fit indices provided some evidence that a single-factor model shows a better fit, although a comparison of this model with two-factor models did not reach statistical significance. The findings point to the potential importance of considering the specificities of a learning environment in interpreting learner achievement on measures of the implicit versus explicit knowledge spectrum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Bilectal Exposure Modulates Neural Signatures to Conflicting Grammatical Properties: Norway as a Natural Laboratory.
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Kubota, Maki, Alonso, Jorge González, Anderssen, Merete, Jensen, Isabel Nadine, Luque, Alicia, Pereira Soares, Sergio Miguel, Prystauka, Yanina, Vangsnes, Øystein A., Sandstedt, Jade Jørgen, and Rothman, Jason
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LINGUISTICS , *DIALECTS , *NORWEGIANS , *COMPREHENSION , *BILINGUALISM - Abstract
The current study investigated gender (control) and number (target) agreement processing in Northern and non-Northern Norwegians living in Northern Norway. Participants varied in exposure to Northern Norwegian (NN) dialect(s), where number marking differs from most other Norwegian dialects. In a comprehension task involving reading NN dialect writing, P600 effects for number agreement were significantly affected by NN exposure. The more exposure the NN nonnatives had, the larger the P600 was, driven by the presence of number agreement (ungrammatical in NN). In contrast, less exposure correlated to the inverse: P600 driven by the absence of number agreement (ungrammatical in most other dialects). The NN natives showed P600 driven by the presence of number agreement regardless of exposure. These findings suggests that bilectalism entails the representation of distinct mental grammars for each dialect. However, like all instances of bilingualism, bilectalism exists on a continuum whereby linguistic processing is modulated by linguistic experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Muddles and puzzles: Metaphor use associated with disease progression in Primary Progressive Aphasia.
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Volkmer, Anna, Cartwright, Jade, Ruggero, Leanne, Loizidou, Maria, Hardy, Chris JD, and Hersh, Deborah
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RESEARCH funding , *APHASIA , *METAPHOR , *CONTINUUM of care , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EXPERIENCE , *LINGUISTICS , *LANGUAGE disorders , *DEMENTIA , *DISEASE progression , *SPEECH therapy - Abstract
Background: Primary Progressive Aphasia describes a languageled dementia and its variants. There is little research exploring the experiences of living with this disease. Metaphor, words that represent something else, have been studied extensively in healthrelated narratives to gain a more intimate insight into health experiences. Aims: This study explored the metaphors used spontaneously by people with PPA, their care partners (family), and speech and language therapists/pathologists (SLT/Ps) providing support along the continuum of care. Methods & Procedures: This study examined two previously collected data sets comprising naturalistic talk where metaphors were not the specific focus, the first from focus groups conducted with people with PPA and their families and the second from focus groups conducted with SLT/Ps working with people with PPA. Transcribed data were analysed for metaphor use through an iterative narrative approach. Outcomes & Results: In all, 237 examples of metaphorical language were identified in the data, with 14 metaphors from people with PPA, 116 from the families and 106 from SLT/Ps. Different metaphors were used by participants to describe their experiences depending on which variant of PPA they were living with, and people also described their disease differently over time. SLT/Ps also used metaphors, however, their language reflected the structured, professional perspective of delivering speech and language therapy services. Conclusions & Implications: SLT/Ps should listen for and recognise the metaphorical language used by people with PPA and their families to ensure therapeutic alignment, see beyond the PPA to recognise the individual’s needs, and provide person-centred and empathic support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. In their own words: linguistic analysis of interviews with Sesotho mothers on their child's first thousand days.
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Allman, Madeleine, Song, Hui, Venta, Amanda, Serekoane, Motsaathebe, Pienaar, Michael, Lenka, Molefi, Marais, Kobus, Cloete, Jan, Marais, Lochner, and Sharp, Carla
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MIDDLE-income countries , *MATERNAL health services , *T-test (Statistics) , *INTERVIEWING , *ANGER , *AT-risk people , *PARENT attitudes , *WORD processing , *ANXIETY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LINGUISTICS , *CAREGIVERS , *EXPERIENCE , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *RESEARCH methodology , *MOTHERHOOD , *LOW-income countries - Abstract
Sensitive and responsive caregiving is a critical protective factor for children in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) during their first 1000 days of life. Health initiatives may benefit from evaluating the experience of caregivers in SSA to understand their parenting experiences. This study utilized linguistic analysis to gain insight into the lived experience of 19 Sesotho-speaking mothers of infants aged 18–30 months in low-income areas of Mangaung, Free State, South Africa. Women were asked the same set of questions about their child's first 1000 days of life, and we used LIWC (Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count) LIWC to evaluate the perspectives of mothers in SA compared to published LIWC norms. Analyses revealed word use patterns associated with psychological processes such as negative affect, social processes, anger and anxiety. Findings are discussed within the context of Sesotho culture to aid in the future intervention development for this vulnerable population. This study is important because it yields important information about the subjective experience of an understudied critical population of mothers in SSA. Further, this study points to future directions for the field of understanding the impact of motherhood on women in low resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Wellbeing programs for culturally and linguistically diverse population in Australia: barriers and improvements.
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Kara, Behice Humeyra and Khawaja, Nigar G.
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HUMAN services programs , *QUALITATIVE research , *FOCUS groups , *INTERVIEWING , *LINGUISTICS , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *WELL-being , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
Despite the emphasis on the wellbeing of culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) populations in Australia, programs that promote wellbeing are scarce. Wellbeing programs are often not developed empirically and under-utilised. The present qualitative study explored limitations of current wellbeing programs, refinements that are warranted, and barriers encountered when implementing these programs. Mental and allied health practitioners (N = 16), working with CALD populations in Australia participated in semi-structured online focus groups. Data were transcribed and analysed using thematic analysis. The generated themes identified limited funding as a major problem. Further weaknesses of existing programs and barriers that prevented CALD populations in engaging with these programs were highlighted. Features of an effective wellbeing program and strategies applied to implement the programs were identified. Theoretical and practical implications for developing and implementing wellbeing interventions for CALD Australians were discussed. Significant dearth of research in this area and the necessity of further literature to identify the value of wellbeing interventions for CALD populations is emphasised. What is already known about this topic: Past research in Australia has focussed more on the challenges of culturally and linguistically diverse population. Programs that promote the wellbeing of culturally and linguistically diverse populations in Australia are limited and underutilised. Barriers in developing and implementing wellbeing programs should be explored. What this topic adds: Funding is vital for the development and evaluation of wellbeing programs for culturally and linguistically diverse populations in Australia. Consultations with culturally and linguistically diverse populations would improve the content and implementation of wellbeing programs. Holistic and flexible programs should be rolled out at the community level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The Emergence and Evolution of Consumer Language Research.
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Packard, Grant and Berger, Jonah
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CONSUMER research , *LANGUAGE & languages , *RHETORIC , *LINGUISTICS , *PHONEME (Linguistics) , *COMMUNICATION - Abstract
Over the last 50+ years, there has been a huge rise in interest in consumer language research. This article spotlights the emergence and evolution of this area, identifying key themes and trends and highlighting topics for future research. Work has evolved from exploration of broad language concepts (e.g. rhetorics) to specific linguistic features (e.g. phonemes) and from monologues (e.g. advertiser to consumer) to two-way dialogues (e.g. consumer to service representative and back). We discuss future opportunities that arise from past trends and suggest two important shifts that prompt questions for future research: the new shift toward using voice (vs. hands) when interacting with objects and the ongoing shift toward using hands (vs. voices) to communicate with people. By synthesizing the past, and delineating a research agenda for the future, we hope to encourage more researchers to begin to explore this burgeoning area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. The Validity and Reliability of the Thanatophobia Scale-Turkish Form: A Psychometric Study Among Nurses.
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Yildiz Çifçioğlu, Zülfiye and Harmanci Seren, Arzu K.
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NURSES , *MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques , *STATISTICAL correlation , *FEAR , *ATTITUDES toward death , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LINGUISTICS , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH , *FACTOR analysis , *EVALUATION ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: To examine the validity and reliability of the Thanatophobia Scale-Turkish Form among nurses. Design and methods: This methodological study included 154 nurses. Content and construct validity, item analysis, confirmatory factor analysis, and internal consistency were used to evaluate the data. Findings: The content validity index of the scale was 0.91. Item-total score correlation values varied between 0.453 and 0.718. As a result of the confirmatory factor analyses, one factor was confirmed. Cronbach's alpha internal consistency coefficient was 0.854. Practice Implications: Thanatophobia Scale-Turkish Form is a valid and reliable tool used to evaluate the fear of death among nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Large language models for science and medicine.
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Telenti, Amalio, Auli, Michael, Hie, Brian L., Maher, Cyrus, Saria, Suchi, and Ioannidis, John P. A.
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LANGUAGE models , *MACHINE learning , *MEDICAL record databases , *SCIENTIFIC language , *LINGUISTICS , *ELECTRONIC health records - Abstract
Large language models (LLMs) are a type of machine learning model that learn statistical patterns over text, such as predicting the next words in a sequence of text. Both general purpose and task‐specific LLMs have demonstrated potential across diverse applications. Science and medicine have many data types that are highly suitable for LLMs, such as scientific texts (publications, patents and textbooks), electronic medical records, large databases of DNA and protein sequences and chemical compounds. Carefully validated systems that can understand and reason across all these modalities may maximize benefits. Despite the inevitable limitations and caveats of any new technology and some uncertainties specific to LLMs, LLMs have the potential to be transformative in science and medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Ageism: the importance of the linguistic concept for the construction of the experience.
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Okun, Sarit and Ayalon, Liat
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LANGUAGE & languages , *QUALITATIVE research , *TERMS & phrases , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *AGE distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *QUANTITATIVE research , *LINGUISTICS , *EXPERIENCE , *AGEISM , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) - Abstract
This study investigated if people are acquainted with the term 'ageism', and to what extent acquaintance with this term corresponds with reports of discrimination, due to age. The study included an online survey, answered by 1,025 Israeli respondents. The questionnaire began by asking the respondents to define 'What is ageism?' (gilanut in Hebrew) and then to mark 'If and what types of discrimination they experienced in the last year'. Subsequently, we defined and demonstrated the term ageism and asked participants to share experiences of this phenomenon; 457 (45%) participants were not familiar with the term. In the group that was unfamiliar with the term, only 46 (10%) reported that they had such experiences. In the group that was acquainted with the term, 208 (30%) reported that they had experienced ageism. In contrast, once the term, ageism, was defined and demonstrated in the survey, 638 (62%) respondents shared experiences of ageism in their lives. Of those who shared their experiences of ageism, 202 (31%) were initially unfamiliar with the term. The study's results show that there is an association between the linguistic representation of the phenomenon of ageism and reports of ageism. In the wider sense, the study shows that language and words have the power to help people understand and interpret social and human experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Comparing incidental learning of single words and collocations from different captioning conditions: The role of vocabulary knowledge and working memory.
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Teng, Mark Feng and Cui, Yachong
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INTELLECT , *CLINICAL trials , *WORD processing , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LINGUISTICS , *ODDS ratio , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *SCHOOL children , *ANALYSIS of variance , *LEARNING strategies , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *VOCABULARY , *SHORT-term memory , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PHONETICS , *VIDEO recording - Abstract
Background: Vocabulary learning in a second language (L2) encompasses crucial aspects, including single words and collocations. Research indicates that L2 learners can incidentally learn single words from captioned videos, but less is known about the incidental learning outcomes of collocations, let alone the differences in learning gains for single words and collocations under different captioned conditions, as well as individual differences that may account for such differences. Objectives: This study aimed to fill this gap by comparing the learning gains of single words and collocations while investigating the influence of vocabulary knowledge (VK) and working memory (WM) on the learning results within diverse forms of captioning conditions: full captions, keyword captions, and no captions. Methods: The study involved 129 young Chinese ESL learners who completed vocabulary tests assessing their meaning recall before, immediately after, and 2 weeks after the study, as well as tests for VK and WM. Results and Conclusions: The results showed that full captions are the most efficacious condition for enhancing both single word and collocation learning. The depth of VK, as well as phonological and complex WM, were significant factors in the learning of new language items. Takeaways: Different types of captioning (full or keyword) contribute differently to the learning of various language items. Individual differences in WM and depth of VK among learners should be considered when utilizing captioned videos for language learning. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: The type of captions employed does influence incidental single word learning.Incidental collocation learning from captioned videos is worth to be investigated due to the essential role of collocation knowledge in L2 development and the limited classroom time.The breadth of prior vocabulary knowledge (VK) does impact the incidental learning of single words across different captioned conditions. However, the findings remain inconclusive.Working memory (WM) plays a vital role in single word learning. However, limited emphasis has been placed on the examination of how WM affects the incidental learning of collocations across various captioning conditions. What this paper adds: Different captioned conditions play different roles in the incidental learning of different language units: single word learning benefits most from full captioning, whereas both full and keyword captioning lead to significant improvements in incidental collocation learning.The depth of VK is a key determinant of both single word and collocation learning from captioned videos, but its impact is greater for collocations.The breadth of VK is more relevant to collocation learning than single word learning.Both phonological and complex WM play an important role in learning both single words and collocations, but their contribution is greater for collocations. Implications for practice and/or policy: L2 policymakers can incorporate short storytelling videos into the EFL curriculum to facilitate vocabulary learning among young learners and ultimately enhance their L2 proficiency.Teachers can strategically design and implement various types of captioned videos (full or keyword) as out‐of‐class extensive viewing activities, targeting different language components such as single words and collocations.Teachers should be mindful of individual differences (e.g., VK and WM) among learners when utilizing captioned videos for language learning, particularly when it comes to incidental collocation learning.Parents are encouraged to include short storytelling videos with captions as part of their children's home entertainment activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Will sentiment analysis need subculture? A new data augmentation approach.
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Wang, Zhenhua, He, Simin, Xu, Guang, and Ren, Ming
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RESEARCH funding , *CULTURE , *EMOTIONS , *NATURAL language processing , *EMOTICONS & emojis , *DATA encryption , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *LINGUISTICS , *SENTIMENT analysis , *AFFECT (Psychology) - Abstract
Nowadays, the omnipresence of the Internet has fostered a subculture that congregates around the contemporary milieu. The subculture artfully articulates the intricacies of human feelings by ardently pursuing the allure of novelty, a fact that cannot be disregarded in the sentiment analysis. This paper aims to enrich data through the lens of subculture, to address the insufficient training data faced by sentiment analysis. To this end, a new approach of subculture‐based data augmentation (SCDA) is proposed, which engenders enhanced texts for each training text by leveraging the creation of specific subcultural expression generators. The extensive experiments attest to the effectiveness and potential of SCDA. The results also shed light on the phenomenon that disparate subcultural expressions elicit varying degrees of sentiment stimulation. Moreover, an intriguing conjecture arises, suggesting the linear reversibility of certain subcultural expressions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Hot Wind, Cold Sun: Kuhn, Vygotsky, Halliday and Metaphors in Science and Science Education.
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Yu, Hailing and Kellogg, David
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SCIENCE education , *HISTORY of science , *SOLAR surface , *CHILD behavior , *CHILD development - Abstract
How and why do crises happen in the history of science? What can they tell us about how crises happen in child psychological development and child behavior? And—as a bonus question—can crises in child development tell us anything about crises in science history? We compare and contrast two superficially similar answers. Then we look at three models for the formation of general, abstract concepts in children developed in integrative psychological and behavioral science by the Soviet pioneer L.S. Vygotsky. Using later, but similarly integrative, linguistic work by M.A.K. Halliday on generality, abstraction and metaphor in child language, we consider a real test case. An outstanding anomaly in solar physics is that the solar wind is actually far hotter than the surface of the sun itself, and a recent paper argues that the energy comes from the damping of waves in the plasma. We analyze the language of a ten-year-old Chinese boy trying to make sense of this phenomenon, and we find that lexicogrammatical metaphors play a very important role in posing the problem to the child, but a process of limiting and deflating metaphors is key to his understanding. This process of limitation and deflation, which corresponds to a crisis, shows us that the analogy between concept development in children in science and the same process in children is no mere metaphor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Older adults' name–face association learning is facilitated for names with high‐frequency first syllables.
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Headen, Bianca A. and James, Lori E.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL aspects of aging , *TASK performance , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *LEARNING , *AGE distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LINGUISTICS , *MEMORY , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *PHONETICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *FACE perception , *THOUGHT & thinking , *OLD age - Abstract
Older adults have even greater difficulty learning name–face associations than young adults, although many variables reflecting properties of the names have been shown to affect young and older adults' name learning similarly. Older adults' name–face association learning was compared for names with high‐frequency (HF) first syllables versus names with low‐frequency (LF) first syllables. Twenty‐eight adults ages 65 to 80 learned five names with HF first syllables and five names with LF first syllables in association with 10 new faces over repeated testing rounds with feedback. Participants learned more name–face associations when the names had HF first syllables than LF first syllables. Findings indicate that older adults benefit from increased frequency of phonological segments within a word on a task other than word retrieval and are consistent with a theoretical framework that accounts for learning new name–face associations, the effects of linguistic properties of the names, and ageing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Songs tell a story: The Arc of narrative for music.
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Alberhasky, Max and Durkee, Patrick K.
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SONG lyrics , *STORYTELLING , *DIGITAL music , *DIGITAL storytelling , *POPULAR music genres , *SONGS , *LINGUISTICS - Abstract
Research suggests that a core lexical structure characterized by words that define plot staging, plot progression, and cognitive tension underlies written narratives. Here, we investigate the extent to which song lyrics follow this underlying narrative structure. Using a text analytic approach and two publicly available datasets of song lyrics including a larger dataset (N = 12,280) and a smaller dataset of greatest hits (N = 2,823), we find that music lyrics tend to exhibit a core Arc of Narrative structure: setting the stage at the beginning, progressing the plot steadily until the end of the song, and peaking in cognitive tension in the middle. We also observe differences in narrative structure based on musical genre, suggesting different genres set the scene in greater detail (Country, Rap) or progress the plot faster and have a higher rate of internal conflict (Pop). These findings add to the evidence that storytelling exhibits predictable language patterns and that storytelling is evident in music lyrics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. علاقة اللسانيات بعلم الصرف.
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نعمات محجوب سعيد
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The aim of the research is to understand the concept of morphology and the difference between that term and other terms related to it, to identify the components of the morphological system, to identify the elements from which the word is formed, to identify the different types of morphology in the light of linguistics, to reveal the method used in formulating words, and to determine the nature of the relationship. Between linguistics and morphology, The research followed the descriptive historical approach the research was divided into the following chapters: the first chapter, the morphological term, the second chapter, linguistics, and the third chapter, the relationship of morphology to linguistics. The research concluded with a set of results, as the research showed a multiplicity of morphological terms indicating one concept that are expressed in multiple terms. The research showed that it did not reach The Arabs introduced morphological terms in linguistics only after a period of the emergence of linguistics in Western countries. Scientists realized the relationship between linguistics and morphology and realized the intersection between linguistics and morphology, which led to the emergence of a field of study located in the area of the intersection between linguistics and morphology, which is the field of phenomenology, and it is based on organizational relationships. Contextualism because it studies the sounds in a particular penny and the changes that result from this juxtaposition are subject to the laws of similarity and dissimilarity. The research concluded with a set of recommendations, the most important of which is not to merge the study of grammar and the study of morphology, and they must be separated at two different levels, as merging leads to a disruption of the order of the language. The research also recommended that a distinction must be made between the linguistics approach and the philology approach, as each approach leads to There is a difference in morphological terminology in both approaches, and it is necessary to bring the language closer to its users, not necessarily by following modern theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
22. She Shuts Her English Channel in Her Brain: Racial and Linguistic Ordering during Kindergarten Practicums.
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Brubacher, Katie and Levi, Thursica Kovinthan
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KINDERGARTEN , *PRACTICUMS , *LINGUISTICS , *CLASSROOMS , *TEACHER education - Abstract
During their kindergarten placements, teacher candidates are learning to teach with young children who may be experiencing linguistic and racial hierarchies in a formal institutional setting for the first time. The purpose of this research is to understand how teacher candidates make sense of the socially constructed boundaries of language and race in their practicum placements in kindergarten classrooms. In our critically informed inquiry, we draw on translanguaging and LangCrit to understand the process of language teaching and learning in kindergarten classrooms. The three teacher candidates in this article, Yu, Fie, and Charlotte, took a required course on supporting multilingual students in the mainstream classroom as part of their requirement to become Primary/Junior (K–6) teachers and were interviewed on their experiences with multilingual children during their practicums. Four major themes were found in the data: language hierarchies during practicums, subverting language hierarchies, translanguaging with families, and racialized experiences of speaking Mandarin. Much more than other grade-level placements, kindergarten placements were spaces where the candidates witnessed communication break down, with families and children refusing to speak English. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Unraveling the Cross-Cultural Differences in Online Expression of Social Anxiety in Online Support Communities.
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Li, Han and Xu, Ye
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SOCIAL media , *QUALITATIVE research , *DATA analysis , *ETHNOLOGY research , *HELP-seeking behavior , *ONLINE social networks , *COMMUNITIES , *QUANTITATIVE research , *MANN Whitney U Test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *THEMATIC analysis , *LINGUISTICS , *LATENT semantic analysis , *STATISTICS , *SOCIAL support , *DATA analysis software , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CULTURAL pluralism , *SELF-disclosure , *SOCIAL anxiety - Abstract
Individuals suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) are increasingly turning to online support communities for self-disclosure and social support. Despite the extensive body of research on online mental health discourses, the cultural nuances within SAD-related discussions remain underexplored. In this study, we examine the cultural differences in online expression of social anxiety by analyzing individuals' self-disclosure and support-seeking behaviors in social media posts. Using two-week data (n = 1,681) from two SAD support communities on the Reddit and Douban groups, we used both qualitative thematic analysis and quantitative semantic analysis to discern prevalent themes and linguistic attributes characterizing these online expressions. Our findings not only uncover common themes such as sharing personal experiences and seeking mutual validations in both communities but also identify their divergences, as Western users primarily sought advice and information in posts, whereas Chinese users were more inclined toward networking. Cultural variations in language use were evident, particularly in individuals' affect and their expression of personal and social concerns. Western users were more likely to convey negative emotions and delve into personal matters related to SAD, whereas Chinese users tended to grapple more with workplace anxieties. This study contributes to the cultural understanding of online mental health discourses and offers insights for crafting culturally sensitive interventions and supports for people with SAD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Agreement attraction in Turkish: the case of genitive attractors.
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Türk, Utku and Logačev, Pavel
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COMPARATIVE grammar , *READING , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *UNDERGRADUATES , *HUMAN research subjects , *TURKS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LINGUISTICS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *MEMORY , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *SEMANTICS , *TIME - Abstract
Speakers have been shown to find sentences with erroneous agreement acceptable under certain conditions. This so-called agreement attraction effect has also been found in genitive-possessive structures such as "the teacher's brother" in Turkish [Lago et al. (2019). Straight from the horsefs mouth: Agreement attraction effects with Turkish possessors. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism, 9(3), 398–426. ], which is in contrast to its absence in similar constructions in English [Nicol et al. (2016). Minimal interference from possessor phrases in the production of subject-verb agreement. Frontiers in Psychology, 7, 548. ]. It has been hypothesised that this discrepancy is a result of the association between genitive case marking and being a controller in Turkish. We test an alternative explanation according to which Lago et al.'s findings are due to a potential confound in their experiment, as the morphology on all agreement controllers were locally ambiguous between possessive and accusative case. The results of our speeded acceptability judgment experiment suggest that the presence of case syncretism does not affect agreement attraction contrary to previous findings in the literature. Abbreviations: ACC, accusative; DAT, dative; GEN, genitive; NMLZ, nominaliser; PASS , passive; PL, plural; POSS, possessive; PST, past; SG, singular; WHEN, when. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. CLIL students' production of cognitive discourse functions: Comparing Finnish and Spanish contexts.
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Llinares, Ana and Nikula, Tarja
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INTEGRATED learning systems , *LINGUISTICS , *SOCIAL sciences , *FUNCTIONAL linguistics , *VALUATION - Abstract
This article presents findings from an empirical study in which we investigated Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) students' linguistic resources in the L2 (English) to convey different Cognitive Discourse Functions (Dalton-Puffer 2013; 2016)—Describe, Compare (Categorize), Report, Evaluate and Explore—in two different contexts. The participants were primary school students (grade 6) participating in CLIL programs in Finland and Spain. To allow comparison, two sets of data were obtained by asking the students to write in response to a similar prompt in the area of social science (History in the Spanish context and Geography in the Finnish context). We compared the frequency of the Cognitive Discourse Functions (CDFs) produced, and the fluency and complexity of students' realizations of CDFs, using tools of Systemic Functional Linguistics. The results reveal similarities across contexts in the frequency and extension of some of the CDFs produced, and differences in terms of CDF complexity, measured in students' use of clause complexes, Appraisal resources and complex nominal groups to express different CDFs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Integrative Complexity, COVID-19, and Political Ideology.
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McCullough, Hayley
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POLITICAL doctrines , *IDEOLOGY , *COVID-19 , *COGNITIVE structures , *ATTRIBUTION of news - Abstract
This study explores the relationship between political ideology and integrative complexity in terms of COVID-19 news coverage. Briefly, integrative complexity is a psycholinguistic construct that examines cognitive structure. Based on a sample of COVID-19 news articles sourced from liberal, moderate, and conservative news networks, the results show liberal and moderate networks displayed higher complexity scores than conservative networks. The results further confirm a complexity pattern seen in previous research — liberals and moderates tend to demonstrate more complex rhetoric than conservatives. Moreover, the conservative networks' lower scores may be explained by the predominance of misinformation in their coverage of COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Identifying and describing developmental language disorder in children.
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Kuiack, Alyssa K. and Archibald, Lisa M. D.
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CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *UNCERTAINTY , *QUANTITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LEARNING , *SURVEYS , *MULTILINGUALISM , *LINGUISTICS , *LANGUAGE disorders , *SPEECH evaluation , *COMMUNICATION , *CASE studies , *PHONETICS , *VOCABULARY , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *SPEECH therapy , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: In 2016–17 an important consensus was established regarding the use of the diagnostic label 'developmental language disorder' (DLD) to describe children with a persistent language problem having a functional impact on communication or learning and in the absence of any other biomedical condition. Despite this consensus, past research has revealed ongoing uncertainty regarding when to use the DLD label among speech–language pathologists (SLPs). Aims: In response to this uncertainty, a survey of SLPs was conducted aimed at investigating which types of clinical language profiles, and specific assessment results, were viewed as warranting the diagnostic label DLD. Methods & Procedures: SLPs were presented with 10 childhood language profiles and assessment results. Participants reviewed each case and described if they felt a diagnosis of DLD was warranted, which presented symptoms were consistent/inconsistent with DLD and if further information/testing was desired. Additionally, participants provided details regarding their personal diagnostic processes. Outcomes & Results: Results indicated a general consensus among SLPs as to when the DLD label should be applied. However, free‐text responses demonstrated considerable variation between clinicians regarding symptoms of importance, points of contention/confusion in language profiles and minimal assessment results viewed as necessary in the diagnostic process. Conclusions & Implications: This detailed look at the assessment/diagnostic process for DLD provides valuable insight into how to build further practice consistency in the provision of the diagnostic label DLD, especially in cases of complex language profiles and assessment results. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: The label DLD should be used as a diagnostic label to describe children with persistent language problems having a functional impact on communication or learning and in the absence of any biomedical condition. However, in current clinical practice, actual use of the label is inconsistent and SLPs face a number of challenges in diagnosing DLD. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: This investigation provides clarity regarding which complexities in paediatric language profiles are most challenging for SLPs when determining if a child does/does not have DLD. Additionally, details regarding current assessment beliefs and practices are explored. What are the practical and clinical implications of this work?: By providing a detailed look at the diagnostic processes of practising SLPs, valuable insight is provided into how to build further practice consistency and confidence in the provision of the diagnostic label DLD, especially in cases of complex language profiles and assessment results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Piloting building early sentences therapy for pre‐school children with low language abilities: An examination of efficacy and the role of sign as an active ingredient.
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Trebacz, Anastasia, McKean, Cristina, Stringer, Helen, and Pert, Sean
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SCHOOL environment , *PILOT projects , *BLIND experiment , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *APHASIA , *LINGUISTICS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LANGUAGE disorders , *RESEARCH methodology , *BODY language , *PERVASIVE child development disorders , *LATENT semantic analysis , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SIGN language , *SPEECH therapy - Abstract
Background: Early intervention is recommended for pre‐school children with low language. However, few robustly evaluated language interventions for young children exist. Furthermore, in many interventions the theoretical underpinnings are underspecified and the 'active ingredients' of the interventions not tested. This paper presents a quasi‐experimental study to test the efficacy and examine the active ingredients of Building Early Sentences Therapy (BEST): an intervention based on usage‐based theory designed to support young children to understand and produce two‐, three‐ and four‐clause element sentences. BEST manipulates the input children hear to support them to harness the cognitive mechanisms hypothesized in usage‐based theories to promote the development of abstract linguistic representations. One such input manipulation is the use of signing alongside verbal input signalling both content and morphology of target sentences. Aims: To examine whether (1) BEST is more efficacious than treatment as usual (TAU); and (2) signing of content and morphology is an active ingredient of the intervention. Methods & Procedures: A quasi‐experimental study recruited children aged 3;5–4;5 years from 13 schools. Schools were assigned to receive either BEST with sign, BEST without sign or TAU. The TAU group received their usual classroom provision. Across arms schools were matched with respect to classroom oral language environment and indices of deprivation. Participants were 48 children (28 boys) with expressive and/or receptive language abilities ≤ 16th centile measured using the New Reynell Developmental Language Scales (NRDLS). Outcomes gathered by researchers blind to treatment arm were NRDLS production and comprehension standard scores and measures of production of targeted sentence structures. Outcomes & Results: Primary outcomes indicate that BEST with sign was significantly more efficacious than TAU with respect to NRDLS production standard score, but not comprehension. The advantage for production was maintained at follow‐up. BEST without sign was significantly more efficacious than TAU on measures of targeted vocabulary, sentence structure and morphology. The results from this quasi‐experimental study provide evidence for the efficacy of a usage‐based intervention on expressive language outcomes for preschool children with low language abilities. There is also evidence to support the inclusion of sign as an active ingredient, and so efforts to train interventionists in its use are worthwhile. Conclusions & Implications: Patterns of findings across outcomes suggest signing of content and morphology may support the development of abstract linguistic representations and accelerate language learning. Given these positive results and the scale of this study, a fully powered randomized controlled trial is warranted. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Robust language skills are crucial for positive social, emotional, academic and economic outcomes across the lifespan. There is a paucity of robustly evaluated interventions for preschool children with language difficulties. The development of such interventions is crucial for ameliorating language difficulties and promoting positive educational and psychosocial outcomes. What this study adds to the existing knowledge: This paper evaluates BEST, a novel usage‐based language intervention targeting children with language difficulties in the early years. Findings indicate that a usage‐based intervention is efficacious for treating language difficulties. In particular, BEST benefited expressive language development, bringing benefits to both treated and untreated language structures and improving standard scores. The role of sign as an active ingredient is also supported. Further evaluation is warranted. What are the practical and clinical implications of this work?: Findings suggest that BEST may be effective for targeting children who have been identified as having language difficulties. In particular, expressive language may be improved when the intervention is delivered as it was originally manualized, including a signing system to represent content and grammatical morphology. More broadly, these findings also provide preliminary evidence that the use of a signing system does not hinder oral language development in children with language difficulties and may conversely support their expressive language. Future research exploring the role and underpinning mechanisms of sign in language intervention is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Cognitive decline assessment using semantic linguistic content and transformer deep learning architecture.
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PL, Rini and KS, Gayathri
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DIAGNOSIS of dementia , *COGNITION disorders diagnosis , *SPEECH evaluation , *CROSS-sectional method , *PREDICTION models , *TASK performance , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *NATURAL language processing , *LINGUISTICS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *DEEP learning , *COMPUTER-aided diagnosis , *LATENT semantic analysis , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *RESEARCH , *SEMANTIC memory , *EARLY diagnosis , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MACHINE learning , *FACTOR analysis , *ALGORITHMS , *DEMENTIA patients - Abstract
Background: Dementia is a cognitive decline that leads to the progressive deterioration of an individual's ability to perform daily activities independently. As a result, a considerable amount of time and resources are spent on caretaking. Early detection of dementia can significantly reduce the effort and resources needed for caretaking. Aims: This research proposes an approach for assessing cognitive decline by analysing speech data, specifically focusing on speech relevance as a crucial indicator for memory recall. Methods & Procedures: This is a cross‐sectional, online, self‐administered. The proposed method used deep learning architecture based on transformers, with BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers) and Sentence‐Transformer to derive encoded representations of speech transcripts. These representations provide contextually descriptive information that is used to analyse the relevance of sentences in their respective contexts. The encoded information is then compared using cosine similarity metrics to measure the relevance of uttered sequences of sentences. The study uses the Pitt Corpus Dementia dataset for experimentation, which consists of speech data from individuals with and without dementia. The accuracy of the proposed multi‐QA‐MPNet (Multi‐Query Maximum Inner Product Search Pretraining) model is compared with other pretrained transformer models of Sentence‐Transformer. Outcomes & Results: The results show that the proposed approach outperforms the other models in capturing context level information, particularly semantic memory. Additionally, the study explores the suitability of different similarity measures to evaluate the relevance of uttered sequences of sentences. The experimentation reveals that cosine similarity is the most appropriate measure for this task. Conclusions & Implications: This finding has significant implications for the early warning signs of dementia, as it suggests that cosine similarity metrics can effectively capture the semantic relevance of spoken language. The persistent cognitive decline over time acts as one of the indicators for prevalence of dementia. Additionally early dementia could be recognised by analysis on other modalities like speech and brain images. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: It is already known that speech‐ and language‐based detection methods can be useful for dementia diagnosis, as language difficulties are often early signs of the disease. Additionally, deep learning algorithms have shown promise in detecting and diagnosing dementia through analysing large datasets, particularly in speech‐ and language‐based detection methods. However, further research is needed to validate the performance of these algorithms on larger and more diverse datasets and to address potential biases and limitations. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study presents a unique and effective approach for cognitive decline assessment through analysing speech data. The study provides valuable insights into the importance of context and semantic memory in accurately detecting the potential in dementia and demonstrates the applicability of deep learning models for this purpose. The findings of this study have important clinical implications and can inform future research and development in the field of dementia detection and care. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: The proposed approach for cognitive decline assessment using speech data and deep learning models has significant clinical implications. It has the potential to improve the accuracy and efficiency of dementia diagnosis, leading to earlier detection and more effective treatments, which can improve patient outcomes and quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Towards efficient, ecological assessment of interaction: A scoping review of co‐constructed communication.
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Carragher, Marcella, Mok, Zaneta, Steel, Gillian, Conroy, Paul, Pettigrove, Kathryn, Rose, Miranda L., and Togher, Leanne
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MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *TASK performance , *RESEARCH funding , *CINAHL database , *APHASIA , *COMMUNICATIVE disorders , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *SOCIAL context , *DISCOURSE analysis , *MEDLINE , *LINGUISTICS , *COMMUNICATION , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *RESEARCH methodology , *LITERATURE reviews , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *COGNITION disorders , *STATISTICAL reliability , *SPEECH evaluation , *MEDICAL databases , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *BRAIN injuries , *STROKE , *TEXT messages , *ECOLOGICAL research , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *INTER-observer reliability ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: The complexity of communication presents challenges for clinical assessment, outcome measurement and intervention for people with acquired brain injury. For the purposes of assessment or treatment, this complexity is usually managed by isolating specific linguistic functions or speech acts from the interactional context. Separating linguistic functions from their interactional context can lead to discourse being viewed as a static entity comprised of discrete features, rather than as a dynamic process of co‐constructing meaning. The ecological validity of discourse assessments which rely on the deconstruction of linguistic functions is unclear. Previous studies have reported assessment tasks that preserve some of the dialogic features of communication, but as yet, these tasks have not been identified as a distinct genre of assessment. We suggest the term 'co‐constructed communication' to describe tasks which are specifically designed to capture the dynamic, jointly produced nature of communication within a replicable assessment task. Aims: To identify and summarize how co‐constructed communication has been assessed with individuals with non‐progressive acquired communication disability regarding task design, measures and psychometric robustness. Methods: A scoping review methodology was used to identity relevant studies. Systematic database searches were conducted on studies published before July 2021. Studies in the yield were assessed against eligibility criteria, with 37 studies identified as eligible for inclusion. Main contribution: This is the first time that co‐constructed communication has been defined as a genre of discourse assessment for stroke and traumatic brain injury populations. Co‐constructed communication has been assessed for 144 individuals with aphasia and 111 with cognitive–communication disability. Five categories of co‐constructed communication tasks were identified, ranging in complexity. Variability exists in how these assessment tasks are labelled and measured. Assessment measures require further psychometric profiling, specifically regarding test–retest reliability and validity. Conclusions: Co‐constructed communication is a discourse genre which offers researchers and clinicians a replicable method to assess language and communication in an experimentally rigorous way, within an ecologically valid context, bridging the gap between experimental and ecological assessment approaches. What this paper adds: What is already known on this subject: Standardized assessments of language skills and monologue offer reliable, replicable ways to measure language. However, isolating language from an interactional context fundamentally changes the behaviour under study. This raises questions about the ecological validity of the measures we routinely use to determine diagnoses, guide treatment planning and measure the success of treatment. What this study adds to the existing knowledge: This review highlights studies that conceptualize, and often quantify, interaction by combining experimental rigour and aspects of everyday dialogue. This is the first time this genre of discourse assessment has been identified. We propose the term 'co‐constructed communication' to describe this genre and provide an operational definition for the term. What are the practical and clinical implications of this study?: Co‐constructed communication assessment tasks require refinement, particularly regarding aspects of psychometric robustness. In the future, these tasks offer pragmatic, meaningful ways to capture the effect and impact of aphasia and cognitive–communication disability within interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. L'Entre d'eux: Lacan, Serres and the climate emergency.
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Richards, Sinan
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PSYCHOANALYSIS , *LINGUISTICS - Abstract
My article claims that the acceleration of the generalised planetary ecological crisis has been worsened by a form of collective reasoning called disavowal. To understand why and how this mode of reasoning in the Global North is accelerating climate boiling, I turn to Michel Serres's Le parasite and Jacques Lacan's psychoanalysis. I seek to bridge the gap between Serres and Lacan on the question of language and its connection to human intersubjectivity, and show how their conclusions reveal the mechanisms behind the cognitive dissonance at hand in the climate crisis. I claim that we can connect these two philosophers through the concept of the 'd'eux', as it relates to intersubjectivity, and I show how they both deploy and rely on the polyvalence and ambiguity of language as a rhetorical strategy to highlight the presence of a 'third', which I claim is the Serresian parasite and Lacanian big Other. This theoretical foundation underlines that one of the key aspects of our linguistic reasoning is to simply accept the imperatives of the parasite or the big Other, and thus enables the argument that our collective psychotic reasoning is, through this evil 'third', contributing to the generalised planetary ecological crisis, that we disavow. In the words of Jean Oury: 'hasard'eux'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Ideal and real paradigms: language users, reference works and corpora.
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Bermel, Neil, Knittl, Luděk, Alldrick, Martin, and Nikolaev, Alexandre
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NATIVE language , *FORM perception , *CORPORA , *LANGUAGE & languages , *LINGUISTICS - Abstract
This article approaches defective and overabundant paradigm cells as an opportunity and pitfall for usage-based linguistics. Through reference to two production tasks involving native speakers of Czech, we show how definitions of these two categories are problematized when multiple forms per context are entrenched, or when pre-emption seems to occur in the absence of entrenchment: in other words, pre-emption occurs via entrenchment of uncertainty. We explain the results by adopting a broader, usage-based perspective. We examine the relationship between frequency (as proxy for exposure) and reference-work information (as proxy for a priori structure) to assess their connection with our experimental results. We assign a role to frequency as helping to form perceptions of "suitable" and "unsuitable" forms, but also note places where non-frequency factors predominate. "Structure" as represented by reference-work recommendations appears to have no significant connection to our experimental results; we discuss reasons for this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Developmental Effects in the “Vocale Rapide dans le Bruit” Speech-in-Noise Identification Test: Reference Performances of Normal-Hearing Children and Adolescents.
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Fontan, Lionel and Desreumaux, Jeanne
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ADOLESCENT development , *REFERENCE values , *NOISE , *CONVERSATION , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *AGE distribution , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *AUDIOMETRY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SPEECH perception in children , *LINGUISTICS , *CHILD development , *FRIEDMAN test (Statistics) , *AUDITORY perception , *DATA analysis software ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: The main objective of this study was to assess the existence of developmental effects on the performance of the Vocale Rapide dans le Bruit (VRB) speech-in-noise (SIN) identification test that was recently developed for the French language and to collect reference scores for children and adolescents. Method: Seventy-two native French speakers, aged 10–20 years, participated in the study. Each participant listened and repeated four lists of eight sentences, each containing three key words to be scored. The sentences were presented in free field at different signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) using a four-talker babble noise. The SNR yielding 50% of correct repetitions of key words (SNR50) was recorded for each list. Results: A strong relationship between age and SNR50 was found, better performance occurring with increasing age (average drop in SNR50 per year: 0.34 dB). Large differences (Cohen’s d ≥ 1.2) were observed between the SNR50 achieved by 10- to 13-year-old participants and those of adults. For participants aged 14–15 years, the difference fell just above the 5% level of significance. No effects of hearing thresholds or level of education were observed. Conclusions: The study confirms the existence of developmental effects on SIN identification performance as measured using the VRB test and provides reference data for taking into account these effects during clinical practice. Explanations as to why age effects perdure during adolescence are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Testing the Continuum/Spectrum Model in Russian-Speaking Children With and Without Developmental Language Disorder.
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Gomozova, Militina, Lezzhova, Valeriia, Dragoy, Olga, and Lopukhina, Anastasiya
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LANGUAGE & languages , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *LANGUAGE disorders in children , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *LINGUISTICS , *SOUND recordings , *MATHEMATICAL models , *SPEECH evaluation , *THEORY , *DATA analysis software , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: Previously, Lancaster and Camarata (2019) showed that the continuum/ spectrum model of the developmental language disorder (DLD) best explained the high heterogeneity of symptoms in children with DLD. We hypothesize that the continuum/spectrum approach can include not only children with DLD but also typically developing (TD) children with different timelines and patterns of language acquisition. This model can explain individual language profiles and deficits in children. Method: We assessed language abilities in a group of Russian-speaking children with DLD aged 4–7 years (n = 53) and their age- and gender-matched peers without speech and language diagnoses (n = 53, TD). We evaluated the children’s performance at four language levels in production and comprehension domains, using 11 subtests of the standardized language assessment for Russian: Russian Child Language Assessment Battery (RuCLAB). Using the kmeans cluster method and RuCLAB scores, we obtained two clusters of children and analyzed their language performance in individual subtests. Results: The analysis revealed that the two clusters of children both included DLD and TD participants: Group 1, with higher test scores (TD = 45, DLD = 24 children), and Group 2, with lower scores (TD = 8, DLD = 29). Children from Group 1 mostly had lower scores at one of the language levels, whereas those from Group 2 struggled at several language levels. Furthermore, children with DLD from both groups tended to be more sensitive to linguistic features such as word length, noun case, and sentence reversibility compared to TD children. Conclusions: The presence of two mixed groups shows that children with diagnosed DLD could perform on par with TD children, whereas some younger TD children could perform similarly to children with DLD. Our findings support the continuum/spectrum model: Linguistic skills in preschool children are a continuum, varying from high to poor skills at all language levels in comprehension and production. To describe a child’s language profile, the tasks assessing all language levels should be used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Conversational Speech Behaviors Are Context Dependent.
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Wynn, Camille J., Barrett, Tyson S., and Borrie, Stephanie A.
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PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *CONVERSATION , *TASK performance , *RESEARCH funding , *GOAL (Psychology) , *MUSICAL perception , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *VERBAL behavior testing , *LINGUISTICS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *DATA analysis software , *ENGLISH language , *SEMANTICS , *VERBAL behavior , *MUSICAL pitch , *ARTICULATION (Speech) ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: According to the interpersonal synergy model of spoken dialogue, interlocutors modify their communicative behaviors to meet the contextual demands of a given conversation. Although a growing body of research supports this postulation for linguistic behaviors (e.g., semantics, syntax), little is understood about how this model applies to speech behaviors (e.g., speech rate, pitch). The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that interlocutors adjust their speech behaviors across different conversational tasks with different conversational goals. Method: In this study, 28 participants each engaged in two different types of conversations (i.e., relational and informational) with two partners (i.e., Partner 1 and Partner 2), yielding a total of 112 conversations. We compared six acoustic measures of participant speech behavior across conversational task and partner. Results: Linear mixed-effects models demonstrated significant differences between speech feature measures in informational and relational conversations. Furthermore, these findings were generally robust across conversations with different partners. Conclusions: Results suggest that contextual demands influence speech behaviors. These findings provide empirical support for the interpersonal synergy model and highlight important considerations for assessing speech behaviors in individuals with communication disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. Scoping Review of Linguistically Responsive Practices for Young Children Who Are Refugees.
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Acar, Serra, Pinar-Irmak, Ozden, and Stone-MacDonald, Angi
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PROFESSIONAL practice , *HUMAN services programs , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *TEACHING methods , *LINGUISTICS , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *LITERATURE reviews , *SPECIAL education , *SPEECH therapy , *REFUGEES , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *INTER-observer reliability , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Young refugee populations continue to grow. This scoping review aims to identify and summarize studies of programs that provide linguistically responsive practices for children who are refugees. Secondary aims of this review are: (a) to identify the gaps in the literature, and (b) to suggest future research and policy directions. By studying key features of linguistically responsive practices for children who are refugees, we can better understand the important components of a high-quality inclusive and equitable environment for all children, including those with minority language backgrounds. We conducted an electronic database search and identified 14 studies. Studies varied in location, country of origin, and language support. The findings from this review revealed a critical need to develop, implement, and study linguistically responsive programs for children who are refugees in host countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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37. Cochlear Implant Evaluations of Spanish-Speaking Adults: A Survey.
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Turnbull, Mariana Mejia, Martin, Brett A., and MacRoy-Higgins, Michelle
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COCHLEAR implants , *AUDITORY perception testing , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *HEARING aids , *SPANIARDS , *AGE distribution , *SURVEYS , *LINGUISTICS , *TECHNOLOGY , *SPEECH perception , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate which of the available Spanish sentence tests U.S. audiologists currently utilize to evaluate Spanish-speaking cochlear implant candidates. An online questionnaire was created and distributed nationwide. A total of 25 audiologists reported using the Spanish HINT and Spanish AzBio. Limitations regarding scoring and variability of accents were described. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. Predictors of Language and Early Reading Development in Kindergarteners Using a Multidimensional Screening Tool.
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Ekelman, Barbara L., Dutka, Debra A., Fox, Katherine, Adamoh-Faniyan, Islamiat, Zuckerman, Astrid Pohl, and Lewis, Barbara A.
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READING disability , *RISK assessment , *READING , *INTELLECT , *SCHOOL environment , *DATA analysis , *SEASONS , *COGNITIVE processing speed , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LINGUISTICS , *LANGUAGE disorders , *ANALYSIS of variance , *STATISTICS , *MEMORY , *COMMUNICATION , *LITERACY , *DATA analysis software , *PHONETICS , *LEARNING disabilities , *DISEASE risk factors , *CHILDREN - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to identify kindergarteners at risk for language and reading disorders and to determine predictors. A representative sample of 311 kindergarteners in general education classrooms in the U.S. Midwest were assessed with the Well Screening in fall, winter, and spring. Groups were compared using analysis of variance (ANOVA) on measures of memory, phonological awareness, retrieval speed, social communication, and letter knowledge. Children at risk for reading disorders performed most poorly on phonological awareness, whereas children at risk for language disorders struggled most with social communication. Retrieval speed alone was not a reliable predictor of reading risk in kindergarten. High performers scored best on working memory. The high-performing reading group outscored the high-performing language group on letter knowledge. Phonological awareness distinguished the high-performing reading group but not the high-performing language group from their non-high-performing classmates. Early identification of these relevant subgroups allows for early targeted interventions and monitoring of growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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39. Morphological Complexity in Writing: Implications for Writing Quality and Patterns of Change.
- Author
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Wood, Carla, Garcia-Salas, Miguel, Schatschneider, Christopher, and Torres-Chavarro, Michelle
- Subjects
- *
PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *SCHOOL environment , *RESEARCH funding , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *SCHOOLS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MULTILINGUALISM , *ENGLISH as a foreign language , *LINGUISTICS , *TEACHERS , *LANGUAGE disorders , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *MEAN length of utterance , *WRITTEN communication , *LANGUAGE acquisition - Abstract
Purpose: The current study examined (a) the relation between morphologically complex word (MCW) use (words containing at least one derivational morpheme such as prefixes and suffixes) and teachers’ ratings of writing quality, (b) average change in MCW use in writing across the school year, and (c) differential change in MCW among students with varying language abilities and linguistic backgrounds including students with developmental language disorders (DLDs) and multilingual learners (MLs). Method: Expository writing samples (writing for the purpose of explaining or educating) were collected in October and May from 824 fifth-grade students, including 109 with DLD and 170 who were MLs receiving English as a second language service. Students’ written responses were coded for the use of MCW. Pearson product–moment correlations and two-level hierarchical linear models were employed to investigate the association between MCW usage and writing quality, as well as increases in MCW usage over the course of the academic year, taking into account the nested structure of students within classrooms. Results: The relation between students’ MCW use and teachers’ writing quality ratings was moderately strong (r = .47). Student use of MCW in expository writing showed significant change from fall to spring across all students. However, the amount of change in MCW use across the school year was significantly lower for MLs (effect size [ES] = .09) and students identified with DLD (ES = .10). Conclusions: The relation between MCW use and teachers’ writing quality ratings highlights the utility of MCW as a written language measure for progress monitoring or assessment. The presence of differential change and potential Matthew effects for MLs and students with DLD substantiates the need for further exploration of instructional components that support the increased use of complex vocabulary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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40. Verb Tense Production in People With Nonfluent Aphasia Across Different Discourse Elicitation Tasks.
- Author
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Hyejin Park, Obermeyer, Jessica, Paek, Eun Jin, and Zurbrugg, Madeline
- Subjects
- *
COMPARATIVE grammar , *TASK performance , *DATA analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DISCOURSE analysis , *LINGUISTICS , *SPEECH evaluation , *LANGUAGE disorders , *ANALYSIS of variance , *STATISTICS , *AGRAMMATISM , *COGNITION , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Purpose: Verb tense production is known to be impaired in people with nonfluent aphasia. Selective past tense impairment in this population has been reported, but results are inconsistent and lacking at the discourse level. In addition, language production can be affected by discourse elicitation tasks depending on the cognitive linguistic demands and instructions unique to each task. There is limited evidence regarding whether verb tense production in people with nonfluent aphasia is impacted by discourse task demands. Understanding this potential impact is important for clinicians and researchers who are interested in assessing and then identifying effective clinical goals for this population. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the trends of verb tense production across various discourse elicitation tasks in people with nonfluent aphasia compared to people without aphasia. Method: Language samples for 23 people with nonfluent aphasia and 27 people without aphasia were obtained for six discourse tasks from the AphasiaBank database. We calculated ratios of past tense, present tense, future tense, imperative, and unknown verb types to compare which tense was used most frequently within and across the tasks and groups. Results and Conclusions: Our findings revealed evidence of verb tense production deficits and a selective past tense impairment in people with nonfluent aphasia. Discourse task effects were shown for people without aphasia but were scarce in people with nonfluent aphasia. This finding could be explained by an overall reduction of verb production and overreliance on present tense production in nonfluent aphasia. These results suggest the potential methodological implications of using different discourse tasks to evaluate verb tense production in people with nonfluent aphasia. Future studies need to evaluate discourse task effects on other aspects of verb production (e.g., moods) and specific task factors (e.g., presence or absence of visual stimulus). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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41. Leveraging Communication Partner Speech to Automate Augmented Input for Children on the Autism Spectrum Who Are Minimally Verbal: Prototype Development and Preliminary Efficacy Investigation.
- Author
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Holyfield, Christine, MacNeil, Stephen, Caldwell, Nicolette, Zimmerman, Tara O’Neill, Lorah, Elizabeth, Dragut, Eduard, and Vucetic, Slobodan
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH , *FACILITATED communication , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *AUTISM , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *ATTENTION , *LINGUISTICS , *COMMUNICATION , *AUTOMATION , *SPEECH disorders , *INTER-observer reliability - Abstract
Purpose: Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) technology innovation is urgently needed to improve outcomes for children on the autism spectrum who are minimally verbal. One potential technology innovation is applying artificial intelligence (AI) to automate strategies such as augmented input to increase language learning opportunities while mitigating communication partner time and learning barriers. Innovation in AAC research and design methodology is also needed to empirically explore this and other applications of AI to AAC. The purpose of this report was to describe (a) the development of an AAC prototype using a design methodology new to AAC research and (b) a preliminary investigation of the efficacy of this potential new AAC capability. Method: The prototype was developed using a Wizard-of-Oz prototyping approach that allows for initial exploration of a new technology capability without the time and effort required for full-scale development. The preliminary investigation with three children on the autism spectrum who were minimally verbal used an adapted alternating treatment design to compare the effects of a Wizard-of-Oz prototype that provided automated augmented input (i.e., pairing color photos with speech) to a standard topic display (i.e., a grid display with line drawings) on visual attention, linguistic participation, and (for one participant) word learning during a circle activity. Results: Preliminary investigation results were variable, but overall participants increased visual attention and linguistic participation when using the prototype. Conclusions: Wizard-of-Oz prototyping could be a valuable approach to spur much needed innovation in AAC. Further research into efficacy, reliability, validity, and attitudes is required to more comprehensively evaluate the use of AI to automate augmented input in AAC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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42. Project Building Bridges: A Framework for Preparing Highly Qualified Speech-Language Pathologists to Serve Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students With Augmentative and Alternative Communication Needs.
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Solomon-Rice, Patti L., Robinson, Nancy B., Soto, Gloria, and Arana, Renelinda
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH therapists , *CURRICULUM , *SELF-evaluation , *FACILITATED communication , *T-test (Statistics) , *HEALTH occupations students , *SPEECH therapy education , *INTERVIEWING , *EVALUATION of medical care , *MENTORING , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CONFIDENCE , *LINGUISTICS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SURVEYS , *GOVERNMENT programs , *RESEARCH methodology , *DATA analysis software , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
Purpose: Project Building Bridges was funded by the U.S. Department of Education Office of Special Education Programs to address the shortage of speech-language pathologists qualified to serve students with complex communication needs who benefit from augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) and are culturally and linguistically diverse. The purpose was to train future speech-language pathologists in culturally responsive AAC practices through coursework and fieldwork in AAC integrated into the Master of Science degree in Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences. Method: Fifty-seven graduate students completed the project. The scholars’ curriculum consisted of two AAC courses, both on-campus and externship AAC clinical practicum experiences to provide services to multicultural and linguistically diverse students, a U.S. or international service-learning opportunity, and cumulative portfolio presentations. Results: Mixed-methods outcome measures consisted of four sets of pre- and postsurveys and qualitative feedback from exit interviews to assess changes in graduate student competencies. Significant differences were demonstrated between scholars’ pre- and post-assessments of confidence ratings. Significant differences were also demonstrated in both scholars’ and school mentors’ pre- and post-assessments of competency ratings. No significant differences were found between evaluations of AAC preparation by Clinical Fellowship (CF) candidates and their CF mentors at 1 year postgraduation. Conclusions: Project Building Bridges provides a framework for preparing highly qualified speech-language pathologists to serve culturally and linguistically diverse students who benefit from AAC as evidenced by pre- and postsurvey results. The project can serve as a model for other university programs in the development of preservice preparation programs focusing on culturally and linguistically diverse students with AAC needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. When the evening lights are lit: exploring the linguistic landscape of Singapore's Chinatown at night.
- Author
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Zhang, Hui, Seilhamer, Mark Fifer, and Cheung, Yin Ling
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LINGUISTICS , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *CHINESE language , *ENGLISH language - Abstract
Responding to a recent call for interdisciplinary research into 'night studies', the present study attempts to put the nighttime at the centre of the sociolinguistic enquiry, seeking to explore how the nocturnal linguistic landscape (LL) differs from the diurnal LL by drawing on Singapore's Chinatown as the research site. A total of 1091 LL items constitute the database. Altogether 808 LL items were collected during the daytime and 283 of these LL items were found to be illuminated during nighttime site visits. The quantitative analysis reveals that the nocturnal LL differs from the diurnal LL in several ways: at the top-down level, the nocturnal LL shows a strong monolingual English tendency, while the diurnal LL has a tendency towards multilingualism; at the bottom-up level, fewer languages are used in the nocturnal signs than in the diurnal signs and Chinese is used as the prominent language in nocturnal signs, whereas English has a leading position in the diurnal signs. Our findings complicate previous scholarly understanding of bilingual and multilingual configurations in Singapore, suggesting that the LL has its own unique representation at night. The potential for integrating nighttime as a new dimension to examine LL is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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44. The role of English in South African multilinguals' linguistic repertoires: a cluster-analytic study.
- Author
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Berghoff, Robyn
- Subjects
- *
MULTILINGUALISM , *LINGUISTICS , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *INDIGENOUS languages of the Americas - Abstract
A substantial body of research has examined the role of English in South Africans' linguistic repertoires. Many of these studies have investigated whether a language shift towards English might be underway among first-language (L1) speakers of the indigenous languages. At the same time, the role of English in the repertoires of L1 English speakers has received little attention, the implicit assumption being that English remains dominant for them. This paper presents an empirically informed comparison of English experience within and across L1 and non-L1 (Ln) English speakers in order to shed light on the importance of English in these individuals' repertoires. Cluster analysis is employed to analyze language background data from bi-/multilinguals (n = 200). The analysis produces two clusters, which differ in extent of English exposure and preference for English use. All but one of the L1 English speakers belong to the 'higher exposure, higher preference' cluster, while the vast majority of the Ln speakers fall into the 'lower exposure, lower preference' cluster. The results indicate that English experience is relatively homogeneous across L1 speakers but differs, for the most part, across L1 and Ln speakers. The findings are relevant to our understanding of language use in multilingual South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. 'English is like a credit card': the workings of neoliberal governmentality in English learning in Pakistan.
- Author
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Manan, Syed Abdul
- Subjects
- *
ENGLISH as a foreign language , *NEOLIBERALISM , *SEMI-structured interviews , *RESEARCH methodology , *LINGUISTICS - Abstract
Employing neoliberal governmentality as a conceptual frame, this paper presents evidence from the mushrooming English language academies from Pakistan to demonstrate that how neoliberal rationality as a normative order of reason governs the minds of learners and teachers without governing. Drawing on the analysis of an open-ended interview protocol and semi-structured interviews, the findings suggest that learning more English is believed to render them competitive in the current linguistic market. The rationality is deeply interwoven with the logic of the market. English is considered instrumental for social survival, a tool that promises all forms of social, cultural, and economic capital. The paper discusses that how the knowledge that neoliberal rationality internalises, apparently governs participants' discourses, actions, and their self-technologies. Self-technologies manifest in their conduct of relentless self-development and self-entrepreneurship. Recurrent neoliberal lexicon embodies their subjectivities. The power of neoliberalism 'inserts itself into their actions and attitudes, their discourses, learning processes and everyday lives' (Foucault [1980]. Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings, 1972–1977. New York: Pantheon Books). The study concludes that the transformative potential and promises attached to English learning are facile because English does not exist in some neutral social space; instead, it operates in a polarised society where the roots of socioeconomic inequalities are fundamentally structural than access to English. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Social judgement of L2 accented speech stereotyping and its influential factors.
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Kang, Okim and Yaw, Katherine
- Subjects
- *
STEREOTYPES , *LINGUISTICS , *EMPIRICAL research , *PRONUNCIATION , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
If extraneous information leads listeners to biased judgements, then their speech perceptions are likely to manifest distortion in that direction. This phenomenon is known as reverse linguistic stereotyping (RLS), which has been confirmed by 25 years of empirical study. Recent research on effects of listener background on ratings of speaker pronunciation and social judgments are likewise consistent with the concept of reverse linguistic stereotyping. In particular, one way of operationalising listener aberration is measuring a function of listener backgrounds and proclivity toward RLS along with a dimension of speaker social attractiveness, superiority, and dynamism. The current study examined to what extent listeners' background characteristics and RLS propensity factors affect their social judgements of second language (L2) accented speech. The background factors included learners' accent exposure, study abroad experience, the degree of foreign language study experience, and three RLS dimensions. Results suggest that listeners who hold negatively stereotyped expectations about LX accents tend to find accented speech less superior and less socially attractive. Findings offer implications to language education and various workforce-related communication in global contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Indigenous language education in Russia: current issues and challenges.
- Author
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Semenova, Elena, Khanolainen, Daria, and Nesterova, Yulia
- Subjects
- *
INDIGENOUS languages of the Americas , *LINGUISTICS , *JUSTICE administration , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
Despite the high number of recognised Indigenous groups who are struggling to maintain their languages, cultures, and identities in Russia, there is little research done on the matters of cultural and linguistic revitalisation. This study sought to address this gap by exploring the views of two Indigenous groups, Karelian and Mari, on the development of their Indigenous languages and educational strategies to protect and revive their languages. The study relied on in-depth one-on-one interviews with 20 participants, ten from each Indigenous group. The findings show that despite older generations' relative proficiency and interest in their respective Indigenous languages, motivation to master them is fading among younger Indigenous populations. There is also a lack of opportunities to learn the languages including informal settings despite protections within the federal legal system. The participants identified three reasons for the rapid decrease of language speakers that include assimilation of the Indigenous groups, differences in rural and urban development, and globalisation. The article concludes with recommendations on how to revitalise Indigenous languages in Russia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Monolingual cringe and ideologies of English: Anglophone migrants to Luxembourg draw their experiences in a multilingual society.
- Author
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de Bres, Julia and Lovrits, Veronika
- Subjects
- *
MONOLINGUALISM , *LANGUAGE & languages , *LINGUISTICS , *IDIOLECT ,ENGLISH-speaking countries - Abstract
This article uses reflective drawing to explore representations of multilingualism by Anglophone migrants in Luxembourg. Analysing twelve interviews in which participants drew and described their language experiences, we examine the language ideologies Anglophone migrants adopt in response to the ideologies of English they encounter. Participants adopt various ideologies, sometimes aligning with the ideology of global English, sometimes with counter-ideologies of resistance to it, and sometimes a mix of the two. Visual features indexing affective states include colour, gesture, facial expression, and composition. Monolingual cringe – expressed as shame, embarrassment and being 'bad at languages' – performs several functions for the participants. Sometimes it serves as an affective disclaimer, allowing them to lean on their privilege in a more socially acceptable way. Sometimes it appears to express genuine distress, in the form of searing linguistic insecurity. Sometimes it performs a distancing function, enabling them to oppose themselves to the stereotype of the monolingual English speaker. The affective intensity of the drawings suggests the ideology of global English does have costs for Anglophone migrants. Fundamentally, though, monolingual cringe reinforces privilege, allowing participants to apologise for their monolingualism even as they continue to benefit from it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Exploring the conceptualisation of linguistic diversity and multilingualism in the construction of (Transnational) European Universities: the case of UNA Europa.
- Author
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Dafouz, Emma
- Subjects
- *
LINGUISTICS , *MULTILINGUALISM , *HIGHER education , *INTERNATIONAL alliances - Abstract
In an increasing context of internationalisation, the European Commission announced in 2019 the creation of the first seventeen 'European Universities' (EUnis), a Pan-European consortium of higher education institutions designed to promote European values, cooperation and identity. Against this backdrop, this paper aims to examine the ways in which these newly created EUnis construct their views of linguistic diversity and multilingualism. The research used as a case study the example of UNA EUROPA, an alliance of eight leading universities with eight different languages. Drawing mainly on content analysis combined with a discourse analysis approach, three data sources – the project proposal for the EU Commission, the UNA EUROPA website documents, and a research interview with one of its representatives – were examined to look into the ways in which languages and multilingualism are conceptualised. Findings reveal that linguistic diversity and multilingualism are given different degrees of visibility in the three sets of data examined and that utilitarian objectives seem to predominate over identity ones. It is expected that these findings will help unveil the ways in which language issues are problematised or not in the agenda of these newly created transnational universities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Mbari and uncle Nicodemus: Male representations in the heterosexual discourse among female undergraduates in Nigeria.
- Author
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Uwen, God'sgift Ogban
- Subjects
- *
SEXUAL orientation , *SEXUAL partners , *LIFESTYLES , *UNDERGRADUATES , *SEX distribution , *HUMAN sexuality , *INTERVIEWING , *LINGUISTICS , *SEX customs , *SOUND recordings , *BODY size , *HETEROSEXUALS , *RESEARCH methodology , *MARITAL status , *ECONOMIC impact , *STUDENT attitudes , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
This paper examines the various labels ascribed to males in the heterosexual discourse among female undergraduates in Nigeria. Insights from Community of Practice and Sexual Script Theory were used to demonstrate the use of situated linguistic choices to establish the differentials in male sexual behaviours. Data for the study were generated through participant observation and unstructured interviews with the aid of audiotape recordings and field notes. The study involves a representative sample of 22 female undergraduates who served as participants and research assistants. The findings reveal that situated language practices stimulate heterosexual discourses where female undergraduates creatively ascribe labels to the different males' sexual scripts. The labels include those related to male sexual performance, body size and size of sex organs, financial and marital status, familial and gatekeeping roles, and other routine sexual behaviours shown by men in sexual phases such as advances, arousal and intercourse. The scripts are also combined to re-enact the peculiar sexual narratives by the female students that show emerging sexual orientations. It is believed that the categorisation of such males' sexual behaviours in the University social contexts, would provide a basis for comparison with the sexual practices of other young adults' social groups across the globe. The paper discusses the various strands of sexual scripts shown by men in their heterosexual relationships with female undergraduates in a Nigerian University. The students ascribed labels based on the sexual performance, economic and marital status, and other routine behaviours that have an impact on the male sexual lifestyle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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