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Jean-Martin Charcot’s role in the 19th century study of music aphasia
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22 |
Written language production disorders: historical and recent perspectives
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Examining language functions: a reassessment of Bastian's contribution to aphasia assessment
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Speaking for yourself: the medico-legal aspects of aphasia in nineteenth-century Britain
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The modern beginnings of research into developmental language disorders
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The 'idioglossia' cases of the 1890s and the clinical investigation and treatment of developmental language impairment
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Re-examining Paul Broca’s initial presentation of M. Leborgne: understanding the impetus for brain and language research
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Commemorating the 3rd epoch of Aphasia research: 50 years since the founding of the Academy of Aphasia
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32 |
"Fools at musick": Thomas Willis (1621-1675) on congenital amusia
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33 |
Darwin’s contribution to the study of child development and language acquisition
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Darwin's “Natural Science of Babies”
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Abstract:
In 1877, the newly founded British journal Mind published two papers on child development. The earlier, by Hippolyte Taine, prompted the second article: an account of his own son's development by the naturalist Charles Darwin. In its turn, Darwin's paper, “A Biographical Sketch of an Infant,” influenced others. Diary studies similar to Taine's and Darwin's appeared in Mind from 1878. In addition, the medical profession started to consider normal child language acquisition as a comparison for the abnormal. Shortly before his death in 1882, Darwin continued with his theme, setting out a series of proposals for a program of research on child development with suggested methodology and interpretations. Darwin, whose interest in infants and the developing mind predated his 1877 paper by at least 40 years, sought to take the subject out of the nursery and into the scientific domain. The empirical study of the young child's developing mental faculties was a source of evidence with important implications for his general evolutionary theory. The social status of children in England was the subject of considerable discussion around the time Darwin's 1877 paper appeared. Evolutionary theory was still relatively new and fiercely debated, and an unprecedented level of interest was shown by the popular press in advance of the publication. This article considers the events surrounding the publication of Darwin's article in Mind, the notebook of observations on Darwin's children (1839-1856) that served as its basis, and the research that followed publication of “Biographical Sketch.” We discuss the impact this article, one of the first infant psychology studies in English, made on the scientific community in Britain in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
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URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/3237/ https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/3237/1/3237.pdf https://doi.org/10.1080/09647040903504823
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The emergence of the age variable in 19th-century neurology: considerations of recovery patterns in acquired childhood aphasia
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Multiple languages, memory, and regression: an examination of Ribot's Law
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Research in applied linguistics at Birkbeck, university of London
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