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1
Examining Cumulative Semantic Interference in Children
Baird, Tieghan. - : University of Alberta. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders., 2020
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2
Eye-tracking Analysis of Reading in People with Aphasia
Mendoza, Mark P.. - : University of Alberta. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders., 2019
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3
An Investigation of Changes in Social-Pragmatic Communication Following Participation in the PEERS Program
Bild, Oliver. - : University of Alberta. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders., 2018
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4
The impact of autism on the heritage language of Spanish-English bilingual children
Hernández, Keren J.. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2018
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5
Mobile Eye Tracking During Storybook Listening: Applying the Visual World Paradigm in the Investigation of Preschoolers' Online Discourse Processing
Toth, Abigail. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2018
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6
Using Eye Gaze to Examine Language Production Processes in Children with Language Impairments
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7
Comprehension monitoring behaviour during reading of connected text in elementary school-children: Comparing eye-tracking and think-aloud methods
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8
Cartoons and comprehension: The effect of visual context on children's sentence processing
Cooper, Rebecca J. - : University of Alberta. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders., 2016
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9
Evidence for the functional and structural differentiation of the inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus using DTI tractography
Rollans, Claire. - : University of Alberta. Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine., 2016
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10
Effects of Disfluencies on Listeners’ Processing of Speech
Leonard, Catherine M. - : University of Alberta. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders., 2015
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11
Effects of Disfluencies on Listeners’ Processing of Speech
Leonard, Catherine M. - : University of Alberta. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders., 2015
Abstract: Specialization: Speech-Language Pathology ; Degree: Master of Science ; Abstract: Background. Stuttered speech (e.g., th-ththth-th-ththth-the car) and typical disfluencies (e.g., thee uh car) have some similarities. Previous research describes a tendency in listeners to predict that a speaker will refer to an unfamiliar object, rather than a familiar one, when both are equally plausible referents in a verbal instruction that contains a typical disfluency. This is referred to as the unfamiliarity bias. When listeners have reason to believe that the speaker’s disfluency may not be reliably tied to word familiarity, the unfamiliarity bias can be suspended. Purpose. The first aim of this study was to determine if stuttering would have the same effect on listeners’ processing of language as do typical disfluencies. The second aim of this study was to investigate whether such effects on language processing would be suspended when listeners were informed that they would hear a person who stutters. Methods. The EyeLink 1000 Plus system was used to collect data from 52 participants. Analyses of variance, with factors of acknowledgement (acknowledgment, non-acknowledgement), target type (familiar, unfamiliar), and fluency (fluent, typically disfluent, stuttered) were used to analyze each dependent variable. Data were analyzed by subjects and by items. Dependent measures were the proportion of looks to the target object and proportion of looks to the competitor object, out of looks to all objects. Planned comparisons were subsequently conducted using pairwise t-tests. Results. The unfamiliarity bias was found with typical and stuttered disfluencies when the target type was unfamiliar, however, acknowledgement of stuttering did not suspend this bias. Conclusions. Listeners responded to stuttered disfluencies in a manner similar to typical disfluencies, but were not affected by the acknowledgement. Further investigation is warranted to better describe the effects of stuttering on speech processing and mitigating factors.
Keyword: Acknowledgement; Disfluency; Eye-tracking; Filled Pause; Fluency; Language Processing; Linguistics; Psycholinguistics; Self-acknowledgement; Speech-Language Pathology; Stuttering; Visual World Paradigm
URL: https://doi.org/10.7939/R3BK16V3B
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/9dfb8da6-1a58-4f65-837f-18dd80adebc0
http://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.42461
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12
Lexical activation effects on children's sentence production
Charest, Monique Joanne. - : University of British Columbia, 2012
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13
Lexical activation effects on children's sentence production
Charest, Monique Joanne. - : University of British Columbia, 2012
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14
Lexical activation effects on children's sentence production ...
Charest, Monique Joanne. - : University of British Columbia, 2012
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15
Lexical activation effects on children's sentence production
Charest, Monique Joanne. - : University of British Columbia, 2012
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16
Intervention for speech production in children and adolescents: models of speech production and therapy approaches: introduction to the issue
In: Canadian journal of speech-language pathology and audiology. - Ottawa, Ont. 34 (2010) 3, 157-167
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17
Predicting tense: finite verb morphology and subject pronouns in the speech of typically-developing children and children with specific language impairment
In: Journal of child language. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 31 (2004) 1, 231-246
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18
Predicting tense : finite verb morphology and subject pronouns in the speech of typically-developing children and children with specific language impairment
In: Journal of child language. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 31 (2004) 1, 231-246
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19
Surface forms and grammatical functions: past tense and passive participle use by children with specific language impairment
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 46 (2003) 1, 43-55
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20
The use of grammatical morphemes reflecting aspect and modality by children with specific language impairment
In: Journal of child language. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 30 (2003) 4, 769-796
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