918 resultados para Reading and Language
Resumo:
There is overwhelming evidence for the existence of substantial genetic influences on individual differences in general and specific cognitive abilities, especially in adults. The actual localization and identification of genes underlying variation in cognitive abilities and intelligence has only just started, however. Successes are currently limited to neurological mutations with rather severe cognitive effects. The current approaches to trace genes responsible for variation in the normal ranges of cognitive ability consist of large scale linkage and association studies. These are hampered by the usual problems of low statistical power to detect quantitative trait loci (QTLs) of small effect. One strategy to boost the power of genomic searches is to employ endophenotypes of cognition derived from the booming field of cognitive neuroscience This special issue of Behavior Genetics reports on one of the first genome-wide association studies for general IQ. A second paper summarizes candidate genes for cognition, based on animal studies. A series of papers then introduces two additional levels of analysis in the ldquoblack boxrdquo between genes and cognitive ability: (1) behavioral measures of information-processing speed (inspection time, reaction time, rapid naming) and working memory capacity (performance on on single or dual tasks of verbal and spatio-visual working memory), and (2) electrophyiosological derived measures of brain function (e.g., event-related potentials). The obvious way to assess the reliability and validity of these endophenotypes and their usefulness in the search for cognitive ability genes is through the examination of their genetic architecture in twin family studies. Papers in this special issue show that much of the association between intelligence and speed-of-information processing/brain function is due to a common gene or set of genes, and thereby demonstrate the usefulness of considering these measures in gene-hunting studies for IQ.
Resumo:
C. L. Isaac and A. R. Mayes (1999a, 1999b) compared forgetting rates in amnesic patients and normal participants across a range of memory tasks. Although the results are complex, many of them appear to be replicable and there are several commendable features to the design and analysis. Nevertheless, the authors largely ignored 2 relevant literatures: the traditional literature on proactive inhibition/interference and the formal analyses of the complexity of the bindings (associations) required for memory tasks. It is shown how the empirical results and conceptual analyses in these literatures are needed to guide the choice of task, the design of experiments, and the interpretation of results for amnesic patients and normal participants.
Resumo:
This study reexamined the association between speech rate and memory span in children from kindergarten to sixth grade (N = 152) in order to potentially account for the inconsistencies within the published literature on this topic. Some of the inconsistencies in past research may reflect the different methods adopted in assessing speech rate. In particular, repeating word triples may itself involve memory demands, contaminating the correlation between speech rate and memory span in younger children. Analyses using composite speech rate and memory span measures showed that speech rate for word triples shared variance with memory span that was independent of speech rate for single words. Moreover, speech rate for word triples was largely redundant with age in explaining additional variation in memory span once the effects of speech rate for single words were controlled. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science.
Resumo:
Given the importance of syllables in the development of reading, spelling, and phonological awareness, information is needed about how children syllabify spoken words. To what extent is syllabification affected by knowledge of spelling, to what extent by phonology, and which phonological factors are influential? In Experiment 1, six- and seven-year-old children did not show effects of spelling on oral syllabification, performing similarly on words such as habit and rabbit. Spelling influenced the syllabification of older children and adults, with the results suggesting that knowledge of spelling must be well entrenched before it begins to affect oral syllabification. Experiment 2 revealed influences of phonological factors on syllabification that were similar across age groups. Young children, like older children and adults, showed differences between words with short and long vowels (e.g., lemon vs. demon) and words with sonorant and obstruent intervocalic consonants (e.g., melon vs. wagon). (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Input-driven models provide an explicit and readily testable account of language learning. Although we share Ellis's view that the statistical structure of the linguistic environment is a crucial and, until recently, relatively neglected variable in language learning, we also recognize that the approach makes three assumptions about cognition and language learning that are not universally shared. The three assumptions concern (a) the language learner as an intuitive statistician, (b) the constraints on what constitute relevant surface cues, and (c) the redescription problem faced by any system that seeks to derive abstract grammatical relations from the frequency of co-occurring surface forms and functions. These are significant assumptions that must be established if input-driven models are to gain wider acceptance. We comment on these issues and briefly describe a distributed, instance-based approach that retains the key features of the input-driven account advocated by Ellis but that also addresses shortcomings of the current approaches.
Resumo:
This paper investigates the factors affecting the language choices of the Chinese Foochows of Sarawak, focusing in particular on how the use of the Foochow dialect vis-a`-vis English and other languages might potentially result in a shift in language allegiance away from Foochow. In the context of Sarawak, the Foochows are a substantial, cohesive and homogeneous Chinese ethnic group with a distinctive language and ethnic identity. One would predict that they would engage in extensive language maintenance behaviour. Instead, Foochows living in non-Foochow dominant areas do not seem to have sufficient attachment to the language to transmit it to the next generation. Is this because the Foochows consider that accommodating to communicative norms is more important than preserving their native language as an inherent symbol of their ethnic identity? Or is it the result of the Foochows’ insecurity about the prestige of the dialect and the status of the Foochow people? These issues of accommodation and language allegiance are discussed, based on interview and questionnaire data from 11 Foochow participants. This data set is part of a larger study on the language use of different ethnic groups in multilingual organisational settings in Sarawak.
Resumo:
Examples of recent research into adolescent risk behaviors from a variety of disciplines and methodologies, denoting the range of researchers interested in this area and whose interest in communication and language articulates and exemplifies the extent of the field, are surveyed in this article.
Resumo:
Inagaki and Hatano (2002) have argued that young children initially understand biological phenomena in terms of vitalism, a mode of construal in which life or life-force is the central causal-explanatory concept. This study investigated the development of vitalistic reasoning in young children's concepts of life, the human body and death. Sixty preschool children between the ages of 3 years, 7 months and 5 years, 11 months participated. All children were initially given structured interviews to assess their knowledge of (1) human body function and (2) death. From this sample 40 children in the Training group were taught about the human body and how it functions to maintain life. The Control group (n = 20) received no training. All 60 children were subsequently reassessed on their knowledge of human body function and death. Results from the initial interviews indicated that young children who spontaneously appealed to vitalistic concepts in reasoning about human body functioning were also more sophisticated in their understanding of death. Results from the posttraining interviews showed that children readily learned to adopt a vitalistic approach to human body functioning, and that this learning coincided with significant development in their understanding of human body function, and of death. The overall pattern of results supports the claim that the acquisition of a vitalistic causal-explanatory framework serves to structure children's concepts and facilitates learning in the domain of biology. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.
Resumo:
The authors investigated the extent to which the joint-attention behaviors of gaze following, social referencing, and object-directed imitation were related to each other and to infants vocabulary development in a sample of 60 infants between the ages of 8 and 14 months. Joint-attention skills and vocabulary development were assessed in a laboratory setting. Split-half reliability analyses on the joint-attention measures indicated that the tasks reliably assessed infants' capabilities. In the main analysis, no significant correlations were found among the joint-attention behaviors except for a significant relationship between gaze following and the number of names in infants' productive vocabularies. The overall pattern of results did not replicate results of previous studies (e.g., M. Carpenter, K. Nagell, & M. Tomasello, 1998) that found relationships between various emerging joint-attention behaviors.
Resumo:
This paper is situated within a theoretical discussion that asserts a positive correlation between indirectness and politeness, and uses these claims as a springboard for an examination of polite ways of issuing directives in eighteenth century Chinese. On the basis of an analysis of directive speech acts from dialogue in the novel Honglou meng, it argues that the concept of indirectness, as it applies to the illocutionary transparency of individual speech acts, has no particular value in the culture and language of eighteenth century Chinese men. It is found that other linguistic devices such as particles, the reduplication of verbs, terms of address, and the presence and sequencing of supportive moves are far more significant to the communication of politeness. The findings suggest a need to rethink current theoretical positions on this subject and move beyond the analysis of individual speech acts to examine the role discourse structure and management play in the enactment of politeness. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Este estudo teve como foco inicial de investigação o modo como livros didáticos de alfabetização propõem o estudo das relações entre sons e letras e letras e sons, e como essa dimensão se articula (ou não) a uma concepção de alfabetização que toma o texto como unidade de ensino. Caracteriza-se como uma pesquisa de cunho documental, trazendo para estudo produções acadêmico-científicas acerca da temática de investigação, tendências teóricas no estudo da alfabetização, o processo histórico da política de avaliação de livros didáticos no Brasil, o Guia de livros didáticos – PNLD 2010 – letramento e alfabetização – língua portuguesa – 2009 e duas coleções de livros didáticos de alfabetização, quais sejam: A Escola é Nossa – Letramento e Alfabetização Linguística; e Porta Aberta – Letramento e Alfabetização Linguística, avaliadas e selecionadas pelo Programa Nacional do Livro Didático (PNLD), na edição de 2009, para o ano letivo de 2010. Assume a hipótese de que a proposta de trabalho com as relações sons e letras e letras e sons trazida pelos livros didáticos de alfabetização, no contexto do letramento, por não tomar o texto como unidade de ensino, acaba por criar obstáculos para a própria compreensão dessas relações pelos estudantes. Toma como princípios teóricos e metodológicos a abordagem bakhtiniana de linguagem, bem como a concepção de alfabetização que baliza este estudo (GONTIJO; SCHWARTZ, 2009). Conclui que, ao não trazer os textos (gêneros discursivos) como enunciados, indiferentes à alternância dos sujeitos do discurso, os livros analisados, não obstante as poucas diferenças existentes entre um e outro, que se referem mais especificamente a informações que tangem à linguística, vão ao encontro de uma concepção de linguagem como um sistema de normas que devem ser anteriormente internalizadas pelo estudante para que este possa proceder à leitura e à escrita. Tratam, pois, a língua materna como uma língua estrangeira ou morta, como se esta fosse estática, permanecendo imune à evolução histórica. O estudo corroborou a hipótese de investigação, uma vez que, desconsiderando e/ou desconhecendo o aspecto dialógico do enunciado, os livros analisados minimizam a possibilidade da instauração de uma abordagem discursiva de linguagem, o que incide no tratamento das relações sons e letras e letras e sons que acabam por apresentarem-se dicotomizadas do texto e seu contexto discursivo e, dessa forma, sua reflexão e sistematização pelos estudantes distancia-se de um estudo dessas relações no bojo dos aspectos sócio-históricos, ideológicos, linguísticos, estilísticos, dentre outros que perpassam seu ensino. Logo, por não propiciarem um tratamento discursivo da linguagem, pouco contribuem para um tratamento “linguístico” adequado, acabando por criar obstáculos para a compreensão dessas relações pelos estudantes. Entende que conhecimentos linguísticos, principalmente referentes às variedades linguísticas e dialetais, tornam-se importantes quando da abordagem dessas relações, entretanto, estes por si sós não garantem sua apropriação. Ressalta o necessário conhecimento por parte dos professores (e autores) acerca da abordagem linguística tomada pelo livro didático de alfabetização e o resgate da autoria docente diante do ensino da língua materna, instaurando um processo autoral-dialógico da produção de conhecimentos junto aos estudantes.