Methods for Studying Language Production
Herausgeber: Menn, Lise; Ratner, Nan Bernstein
Methods for Studying Language Production
Herausgeber: Menn, Lise; Ratner, Nan Bernstein
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In this volume, language researchers studying morphosyntax, the lexicon, and pragmatics share and evaluate methods of eliciting and analyzing language production in various populations and settings. For all language researchers, applied and theoretical.
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In this volume, language researchers studying morphosyntax, the lexicon, and pragmatics share and evaluate methods of eliciting and analyzing language production in various populations and settings. For all language researchers, applied and theoretical.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Oktober 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9780805830347
- ISBN-10: 0805830340
- Artikelnr.: 57063439
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Oktober 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9780805830347
- ISBN-10: 0805830340
- Artikelnr.: 57063439
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Lise Menn, Nan Bernstein Ratner
Contents: N.B. Ratner, L. Menn, In the Beginning Was the Wug: Forty Years
of Language-Elicitation Studies. Part I:Eliciting Knowledge of Language.
E.F. Masur, Infants' Verbal Imitation and Their Language Development:
Controversies, Techniques, and Consequences. L. Gerken, Examining Young
Children's Morphosyntactic Development Through Elicited Production. E.V.
Clark, Coining New Words: Old and New Word Forms for New Meanings. R.A.
Berman, Children's Innovative Verbs Versus Nouns: Structured Elicitations
and Spontaneous Coinages. J. Gropen, Methods for Studying the Production of
Argument Structure in Children and Adults. K.E. Nelson, Methods for
Stimulating and Measuring Lexical and Syntactic Advances: Why Fiffins and
Lobsters Can Tag Along With Other Recast Friends. C. Doughty, M.H. Long,
Eliciting Second Language Speech Data. Part II:Gathering Production Data in
Naturalistic Settings.C.E. Johnson, What You See Is What You Get: The
Importance of Transcription for Interpreting Children's Morphosyntactic
Development. B.A. Pan, R.Y. Perlmann, C.E. Snow, Food for Thought: Dinner
Table as a Context for Observing Parent-Child Discourse. E. Andersen,
Exploring Register Knowledge: The Value of "Controlled Improvisation." R.
Ely, A. Wolf, A. McCabe, G. Melzi, The Story Behind the Story: Gathering
Narrative Data From Children. S. Ervin-Tripp, Studying Conversation: How to
Get Natural Peer Interaction. Part III:Developmental Disorders.N.B. Ratner,
Elicited Imitation and Other Methods for the Analysis of Trade-Offs Between
Speech and Language Skills in Children. H. Tager-Flusberg, The Challenge of
Studying Language Development in Children With Autism. L.B. Leonard,
Understanding Grammatical Deficits in Children With Specific Language
Impairment: The Evaluation of Productivity. M.L. Donahue, Influences of
School-Age Children's Beliefs and Goals on Their Elicited Pragmatic
Performance: Lessons Learned From Kissing the Blarney Stone. Part IV:Adult
Disorders.H. Goodglass, Jean Berko Gleason's Contributions to Aphasia
Research: Pioneering Elicitation Techniques. L. Menn, Studying the
Pragmatic Microstructure of Aphasic and Normal Speech: An Experimental
Approach. L.K. Obler, S. De Santi, Eliciting Language From Patients With
Alzheimer's Disease.
of Language-Elicitation Studies. Part I:Eliciting Knowledge of Language.
E.F. Masur, Infants' Verbal Imitation and Their Language Development:
Controversies, Techniques, and Consequences. L. Gerken, Examining Young
Children's Morphosyntactic Development Through Elicited Production. E.V.
Clark, Coining New Words: Old and New Word Forms for New Meanings. R.A.
Berman, Children's Innovative Verbs Versus Nouns: Structured Elicitations
and Spontaneous Coinages. J. Gropen, Methods for Studying the Production of
Argument Structure in Children and Adults. K.E. Nelson, Methods for
Stimulating and Measuring Lexical and Syntactic Advances: Why Fiffins and
Lobsters Can Tag Along With Other Recast Friends. C. Doughty, M.H. Long,
Eliciting Second Language Speech Data. Part II:Gathering Production Data in
Naturalistic Settings.C.E. Johnson, What You See Is What You Get: The
Importance of Transcription for Interpreting Children's Morphosyntactic
Development. B.A. Pan, R.Y. Perlmann, C.E. Snow, Food for Thought: Dinner
Table as a Context for Observing Parent-Child Discourse. E. Andersen,
Exploring Register Knowledge: The Value of "Controlled Improvisation." R.
Ely, A. Wolf, A. McCabe, G. Melzi, The Story Behind the Story: Gathering
Narrative Data From Children. S. Ervin-Tripp, Studying Conversation: How to
Get Natural Peer Interaction. Part III:Developmental Disorders.N.B. Ratner,
Elicited Imitation and Other Methods for the Analysis of Trade-Offs Between
Speech and Language Skills in Children. H. Tager-Flusberg, The Challenge of
Studying Language Development in Children With Autism. L.B. Leonard,
Understanding Grammatical Deficits in Children With Specific Language
Impairment: The Evaluation of Productivity. M.L. Donahue, Influences of
School-Age Children's Beliefs and Goals on Their Elicited Pragmatic
Performance: Lessons Learned From Kissing the Blarney Stone. Part IV:Adult
Disorders.H. Goodglass, Jean Berko Gleason's Contributions to Aphasia
Research: Pioneering Elicitation Techniques. L. Menn, Studying the
Pragmatic Microstructure of Aphasic and Normal Speech: An Experimental
Approach. L.K. Obler, S. De Santi, Eliciting Language From Patients With
Alzheimer's Disease.
Contents: N.B. Ratner, L. Menn, In the Beginning Was the Wug: Forty Years
of Language-Elicitation Studies. Part I:Eliciting Knowledge of Language.
E.F. Masur, Infants' Verbal Imitation and Their Language Development:
Controversies, Techniques, and Consequences. L. Gerken, Examining Young
Children's Morphosyntactic Development Through Elicited Production. E.V.
Clark, Coining New Words: Old and New Word Forms for New Meanings. R.A.
Berman, Children's Innovative Verbs Versus Nouns: Structured Elicitations
and Spontaneous Coinages. J. Gropen, Methods for Studying the Production of
Argument Structure in Children and Adults. K.E. Nelson, Methods for
Stimulating and Measuring Lexical and Syntactic Advances: Why Fiffins and
Lobsters Can Tag Along With Other Recast Friends. C. Doughty, M.H. Long,
Eliciting Second Language Speech Data. Part II:Gathering Production Data in
Naturalistic Settings.C.E. Johnson, What You See Is What You Get: The
Importance of Transcription for Interpreting Children's Morphosyntactic
Development. B.A. Pan, R.Y. Perlmann, C.E. Snow, Food for Thought: Dinner
Table as a Context for Observing Parent-Child Discourse. E. Andersen,
Exploring Register Knowledge: The Value of "Controlled Improvisation." R.
Ely, A. Wolf, A. McCabe, G. Melzi, The Story Behind the Story: Gathering
Narrative Data From Children. S. Ervin-Tripp, Studying Conversation: How to
Get Natural Peer Interaction. Part III:Developmental Disorders.N.B. Ratner,
Elicited Imitation and Other Methods for the Analysis of Trade-Offs Between
Speech and Language Skills in Children. H. Tager-Flusberg, The Challenge of
Studying Language Development in Children With Autism. L.B. Leonard,
Understanding Grammatical Deficits in Children With Specific Language
Impairment: The Evaluation of Productivity. M.L. Donahue, Influences of
School-Age Children's Beliefs and Goals on Their Elicited Pragmatic
Performance: Lessons Learned From Kissing the Blarney Stone. Part IV:Adult
Disorders.H. Goodglass, Jean Berko Gleason's Contributions to Aphasia
Research: Pioneering Elicitation Techniques. L. Menn, Studying the
Pragmatic Microstructure of Aphasic and Normal Speech: An Experimental
Approach. L.K. Obler, S. De Santi, Eliciting Language From Patients With
Alzheimer's Disease.
of Language-Elicitation Studies. Part I:Eliciting Knowledge of Language.
E.F. Masur, Infants' Verbal Imitation and Their Language Development:
Controversies, Techniques, and Consequences. L. Gerken, Examining Young
Children's Morphosyntactic Development Through Elicited Production. E.V.
Clark, Coining New Words: Old and New Word Forms for New Meanings. R.A.
Berman, Children's Innovative Verbs Versus Nouns: Structured Elicitations
and Spontaneous Coinages. J. Gropen, Methods for Studying the Production of
Argument Structure in Children and Adults. K.E. Nelson, Methods for
Stimulating and Measuring Lexical and Syntactic Advances: Why Fiffins and
Lobsters Can Tag Along With Other Recast Friends. C. Doughty, M.H. Long,
Eliciting Second Language Speech Data. Part II:Gathering Production Data in
Naturalistic Settings.C.E. Johnson, What You See Is What You Get: The
Importance of Transcription for Interpreting Children's Morphosyntactic
Development. B.A. Pan, R.Y. Perlmann, C.E. Snow, Food for Thought: Dinner
Table as a Context for Observing Parent-Child Discourse. E. Andersen,
Exploring Register Knowledge: The Value of "Controlled Improvisation." R.
Ely, A. Wolf, A. McCabe, G. Melzi, The Story Behind the Story: Gathering
Narrative Data From Children. S. Ervin-Tripp, Studying Conversation: How to
Get Natural Peer Interaction. Part III:Developmental Disorders.N.B. Ratner,
Elicited Imitation and Other Methods for the Analysis of Trade-Offs Between
Speech and Language Skills in Children. H. Tager-Flusberg, The Challenge of
Studying Language Development in Children With Autism. L.B. Leonard,
Understanding Grammatical Deficits in Children With Specific Language
Impairment: The Evaluation of Productivity. M.L. Donahue, Influences of
School-Age Children's Beliefs and Goals on Their Elicited Pragmatic
Performance: Lessons Learned From Kissing the Blarney Stone. Part IV:Adult
Disorders.H. Goodglass, Jean Berko Gleason's Contributions to Aphasia
Research: Pioneering Elicitation Techniques. L. Menn, Studying the
Pragmatic Microstructure of Aphasic and Normal Speech: An Experimental
Approach. L.K. Obler, S. De Santi, Eliciting Language From Patients With
Alzheimer's Disease.