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61
¿Sería coser y… cantar? El papel del sonido en la memorización fraseológica en ELE
In: Revista Nebrija de Linguistica Aplicada a la Enseñanza de Lenguas, Vol 16, Iss 32 (2022) (2022)
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62
Linguistic and non-linguistic cues to acquiring the strong distributivity of each
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 7, No 1 (2022): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 5236 ; 2473-8689 (2022)
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63
Relative gradable adjective recursion such as small small big mushrooms is more challenging for children than possessive recursion such as the deer’s friend’s sister’s mushrooms
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 7, No 1 (2022): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 5294 ; 2473-8689 (2022)
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64
Children are more sensitive to the Recursive Set-Subset Ordering than to Adjective Ordering Restrictions
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 7, No 1 (2022): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 5267 ; 2473-8689 (2022)
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65
A sociophonetic approach to the acquisition of Spanish rhotics in a bilingual community
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 7, No 1 (2022): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 5231 ; 2473-8689 (2022)
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66
The development of vowel length as a subphonemic cue
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 7, No 1 (2022): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 5273 ; 2473-8689 (2022)
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67
Individual Differences in First Language Acquisition
In: Annual Review of Linguistics (2021)
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68
Socialization to book-reading in French and English family life: a longitudinal and comparative interactive study of specialized language practices
In: IPrA, International Pragmatics Association ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03407949 ; IPrA, International Pragmatics Association, Jun 2021, Winthertour, Switzerland (2021)
Abstract: International audience ; At the heart of understanding the relationship between child language development and everyday experience is the linguistic anthropological perspective that views language as a form of social action and speaking as organizing social life (Duranti, 2011). This view puts interaction at the center of the organization of everyday life. It builds on the premise that language is a crucial medium for instilling and transforming socio-cultural competence across the life span (Schieffelin & Ochs, 1986). Language socialization research analyzes how and why young children are apprenticed through language into particular activities and how they learn the communicative skills necessary for inhabiting cultural identities. In this study, social interactions during book-reading in mother-child longitudinal data were mined for culturally rooted ways in which adults and children coordinate modes of communication, actions, bodies, and objects, in the environment to enhance their knowledge and skills.Two French children and two English children were filmed once a month in their family environment from 1 to 7 years old. We focused on book-reading situations as they naturally occurred during our video-recordings and on the unfurling of multidimensional ritualized scripts that associate an object (the book), manipulative actions, and specific language practices performed with a range of semiotic resources (gaze, facial expressions, gestures, speech). We identified two types of activities initiated by adults in book-reading situations based on their multimediality: 1) the visual medium provided by the pictures is used to make descriptions and ask questions complemented by pointing to guide the children to build their lexicon through labeling and to help them connect characters and events; 2) the vocal modality is used to tell stories and build the children’s narrative skills. But book-reading also affords wonderful opportunities for adults to navigate between reality (the children’s everyday life experience) and fiction (the events and characters portrayed through the pictures and the text). Those constant shifts elicit both displaced speech and affective comments. We hypothesize that early book reading routines between a child who cannot read and a parent are relevant situations for children’s socialization to book reading. Book reading situations may also enhance children’s capacity to identify and understand others’ viewpoints and learn to subjectively position themselves using all the semiotic means they have at their disposal.Our in-depth analyses of the longitudinal interactive data highlight the hybridity of the language productions in book reading situations that combine text that is read with spontaneous discourse, fictive and experiential narratives. Those hybrid productions enable adults to transmit and elicit specialized lexicon, morphology, syntax, co-verbal gestures and facial expressions. Children not only develop specific language practices, linguistic constructions and genres, but are also progressively socialized to a large variety of culturally relevant displays of stance as they build parallels between the characters and events being depicted and themselves as heroes of their own everyday lives.
Keyword: [SCCO.LING]Cognitive science/Linguistics; Book-reading; first language acquisition; language socialization
URL: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03407949
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69
Processing Verb Meanings and the Declarative/Procedural Model: A Developmental Study
In: EISSN: 1664-1078 ; Frontiers in Psychology ; https://hal.univ-reims.fr/hal-03628140 ; Frontiers in Psychology, Frontiers, 2021, 12, pp.714523. ⟨10.3389/fpsyg.2021.714523⟩ ; https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.714523 (2021)
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70
Toddlers exploit referential and syntactic cues to flexibly adapt their interpretation of novel verb meanings
In: ISSN: 0022-0965 ; EISSN: 1096-0457 ; Journal of Experimental Child Psychology ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03468213 ; Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, Elsevier, 2021, 203, pp.105017. ⟨10.1016/j.jecp.2020.105017⟩ (2021)
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71
18‐month‐olds fail to use recent experience to infer the syntactic category of novel words
In: ISSN: 1363-755X ; EISSN: 1467-7687 ; Developmental Science ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03098848 ; Developmental Science, Wiley, In press, ⟨10.1111/desc.13030⟩ (2021)
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72
From Error Annotation to Quantitative Analysis: Patterns in Russian Language Learning
In: ISSN: 0036-0252 ; Russian language journal ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03376956 ; Russian language journal, American Councils for International Education, Michigan State University 2021, 71 (3), pp.39-70 (2021)
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73
Do Infants Really Learn Phonetic Categories?
In: EISSN: 2470-2986 ; Open Mind ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03550830 ; Open Mind, MIT Press, 2021, 5, pp.113-131. ⟨10.1162/opmi_a_00046⟩ (2021)
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74
Corpus ESLO-Enfants : de sa création aux premiers résultats
In: ISSN: 1638-9808 ; EISSN: 1765-3126 ; Corpus ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03162347 ; Corpus, Bases, Corpus, Langage - UMR 7320, 2021 (2021)
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75
Eighteen-month-old infants represent nonlocal syntactic dependencies.
In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol 118, iss 41 (2021)
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76
Eighteen-month-old infants represent nonlocal syntactic dependencies.
In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol 118, iss 41 (2021)
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77
Phonetic variation in coronals in English infant-directed speech: A large-scale corpus analysis
Khlystova, Ekaterina A. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2021
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78
The Languages of Berkeley: An Online Exhibition
Potts, Claude H.; Alter, Robert; Astourian, Stephan. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2021
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79
To Game, or Not to Game?: Addressing the Question of Cultural Scripts and Game use in Language Learning
Wheeler, Madison. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2021
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80
Parent Language Input Prior to School Forecasts Change in Children's Language-Related Cortical Structures During Mid-Adolescence.
Asaridou, Salomi S; Demir-Lira, Ö Ece; Goldin-Meadow, Susan. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2021
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