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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
431

La compréhension des ambiguïtés sémantiques : une perspective expérimentale / Understanding semantic ambiguities : an experimental perspective

Maldonado, Mora 05 June 2018 (has links)
Les ambiguïtés de phrases sont au cœur de la recherche sur la compréhension du langage depuis un certain temps. Pour les sémanticiens, ces ambigüités ont été utilisées pour suggérer l’existence de différents mécanismes abstraits qui pourraient s’appliquer à une même structure syntaxique au stade de l’interprétation. Pour les psycholinguistes, les ambiguïtés sémantiques ont offert un outil d’étude de la dynamique du traitement de phrases : puisque les ambiguïtés tendent à être résolues incrémentalement (c’est-à-dire avant la fin de la phrase), le schéma de traitement des phrases ambiguës peut permettre d’identifier les facteurs linguistiques et non linguistiques qui jouent un rôle dans la compréhension online. Cette dissertation traite des théories de la compréhension du langage en explorant deux questions complémentaires : (1) comment différents sens peuvent-ils être associés à une seule tournure de phrase, et (2) comment sommes-nous capables d’accéder à ces interprétations alternatives et de les traiter pendant l’analyse syntaxique. Pour répondre à ces questions, la présente étude se focalise principalement sur ce qu’on appelle les ambiguïtés de pluriel, qui surgissent par l’interaction entre certains prédicats et leurs arguments pluriels. Par exemple, la phrase Amir et Milica ont construit un château de sable a une interprétation non distributive, collective (c’est-à-dire qu’Amir et Milica ont construit ensemble un château de sable) mais aussi une interprétation distributive (c’est-à-dire qu’Amir et Milica ont chacun construit un château de sable). La plupart des approches linguistiques partent du principe que les lectures distributives dérivent d’interprétations non distributives, plus élémentaires, par l’application d’un opérateur de « distributivité » phonologiquement nul (Link, 1987 ; Champollion, 2014). La première partie de cette dissertation présente deux études qui visent à identifier les mécanismes abstraits qui sous-tendent le contraste distributif/non distributif à travers un paradigme d’amorçage. Cette méthode d’amorçage est ensuite étendue à d’autres phénomènes sémantiques (c’est-à-dire des ambiguïtés de portée) dans la deuxième partie de la dissertation, dans laquelle des interactions entre pluralité et phénomène de portée sont aussi testées expérimentalement. Pour évaluer la dynamique de la résolution des ambiguïtés, la troisième partie de cette dissertation présente une étude de suivi des mouvements de souris, conçue pour établir les caractéristiques de trajectoires de souris qui se corrèlent avec la prise de décision et la désambiguïsation. La méthodologie développée dans cette étude est ensuite utilisée pour analyser des données préliminaires relatives au traitement de phrases à ambiguïtés de pluriel. / Sentence ambiguities have been at the center of the research on language comprehension for some time. For semanticists, these ambiguities have been taken to suggest the existence of different abstract mechanisms that may apply to the same syntactic structure at the interpretation stage. For psycholinguists, semantic ambiguities have provided a tool to analyze the dynamics of sentence parsing: since ambiguities tend to be solved incrementally (i.e. before the end of the sentence), the processing pattern of ambiguous sentences might allow identifying the linguistic and non-linguistic factors that play a role during online comprehension. This dissertation informs theories of language comprehension by exploring two complementary questions: (1) how are different meanings associated to a single sentence form, and (2) how are we able to access and compute these alternative interpretations during parsing. To address these questions, the present work mainly focuses on the so-called plural ambiguities, which arise by the interaction between certain predicates and their plural arguments. For instance, the sentence Amir and Milica built a sandcastle has a non-distributive, collective, interpretation (i.e. Amir and Milica together built a sandcastle) as well as a distributive one (i.e. Amir and Milica each built a sandcastle). Most linguistic approaches assume that distributive readings are derived from more basic non-distributive interpretations by the application of a covert “distributivity” operator (Link, 1987; Champollion, 2014) . The first part of this dissertation presents two studies that aim to identify the abstract mechanisms underlying the distributive/non-distributive contrast through a priming paradigm. This priming method is then extended to other semantic phenomena (i.e. scope ambiguities) in the second part of the dissertation, where some interactions between plurality and scope phenomena are also tested experimentally. To assess the dynamics of ambiguity resolution, the third part of this work presents a mouse-tracking study designed to establish the features of mouse-trajectories that correlate with decision making and disambiguation. The methodology developed in this study is then used to analyze preliminary data on the processing of plural ambiguous sentences.
432

La représentation psycholinguistique de la psyché dans Night and Day, Mrs Dalloway et Flush de Virginia Woolf : essai de typologie / Psycholinguistic representation of the psyche in Night and day, Mrs Dalloway and Flush by Virginia Woolf : attempting a typology

Pedinielli-Feron, Alexandra 30 November 2018 (has links)
Cette thèse se propose de dresser un portrait des différentes techniques de représentation de la psyché des personnages utilisées dans trois romans de Virginia Woolf, à savoir Mrs Dalloway, Night and Day et Flush. Pour cela, elle entend questionner les grammaires traditionnelles qui analysent la psyché représentée en contexte de fiction depuis un point de vue strictement formel et syntaxique et qui ne tiennent pas compte de ce que la psyché implique en termes de production ou de non-production d’un discours intérieur linguistique. Elle propose ainsi une définition psychologique et linguistique des mécanismes internes de« l’appareil psychique » sur laquelle elle se fonde pour, dans un second temps, définir et produire une analyse des techniques de représentation de la psyché qui se rencontrent dans le corpus woolfien choisi. / This thesis examines the various techniques used to represent the characters’ psyches in three novels by Virginia Woolf, namely Mrs Dalloway, Night and Day and Flush. To this end, it questions traditional grammars which analyze representations of the psyche in fictional contexts from a strictly formal and syntactical point of view, regardless of what the psyche implies in terms of the production or non-production of linguistic self-talk. First it presents a psychological and linguistic definition of the internal mechanisms of the "psychic apparatus", which then serves as groundwork for our definition and analysis of the techniques used to represent the psyche in our corpus.
433

Bilingvismus jako nevýhoda? Lexikální vybavování v prvním jazyce bilingvních mluvčích / Bilingualism as a disadvantage? Lexical retrieval in the bilinguals' first language

Hamanová, Marie - Anna January 2020 (has links)
The thesis focuses on lexical retrieval in bilinguals' first language. The aim of the work is to follow up on the research conducted abroad which has shown that lexical retrieval in the first language of bilinguals is slower than lexical retrieval in matched monolinguals. The present thesis is based on an experiment consisting of a verbal fluency task and a picture naming task; the participants were 152+120 students of the Faculty of Arts of Charles University with varying levels of their L2 (ranging from speakers with low proficiency in L2 to almost balanced bilinguals). In contrast to the previous research, this project thus views L2 proficiency as differentiated along a scale. The results of both tasks suggest that lexical retrieval in native speakers of Czech with high proficiency in L2 is not slower than in matched speakers with low proficiency in L2. Analysis of reaction times in the picture naming task also indicates the involvement of frequency and cognate effects.
434

Factors affecting outcomes for semantic feature analysis treatment in post-stroke bilingual aphasia

Scimeca, Michael D. 04 February 2021 (has links)
The aims of this study were to determine if various treatment, item, and patient-level factors could be used to predict probe naming accuracy in a bilingual Spanish-English SFA treatment study. At the treatment-level, variables included phase (baseline vs. treatment), training condition (trained set 1 items vs. translations), and time (session). At the item-level, psycholinguistic variables were investigated including lexical frequency, phonological length in phones, and phonological neighborhood density. Finally, at the patient-level, impairment measures were used including aphasia severity (as measured by WAB AQ) naming impairment (represented by a composite naming score from pre-treatment assessments). Mixed-effects logistic regression methods were used to fit the data with fixed effects for the variables of interest as well as random effects for subject and item. The regression analyses revealed significant main effects of phase, time, and interactions with training condition such that naming accuracy on probes was higher for the treatment language during the treatment phase and over time in general. Significant effects were also noted for each of the psycholinguistic variables such that increased frequency, shorter length, and a larger neighborhood increased the likelihood of correct naming responses. Finally, overall aphasia severity and naming impairment both correlated with naming outcomes.
435

Universal grammar and syntactic development in children : toward a theory of syntactic development

Otsu, Yukio January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Linguistics and Philosophy, 1981. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND HUMANITIES. / Vita. / Bibliography: leaves 195-202. / by Yukio Otsu. / Ph.D.
436

Comprehension and Phonemic Mismatch in Disordered Speech

Pummill, Kacie L. 12 September 2019 (has links)
No description available.
437

Let’s talk: The dual process model of supportive communication in peers

Szkody, Erica Marie 09 August 2022 (has links) (PDF)
Supportive messages occur within most relationships. Researchers have found strong relationships between social support and various physical and psychological health outcomes, but the specific mechanisms at work have yet to be fully explored. Many factors contribute to whether a supportive interaction is processed as helpful or supportive by the recipient including relational factors, message content, past experiences, etc. For peer dyads, the context and supportive messages individuals provide their peer may inhibit or contribute to their perception of their peer’s supportive behavior. The current study examined the impact of contextual factors (such as family communication patterns and relationship quality) on message content and the perception of social support within peer relationships. Emerging adult dyads (N = 127) were recruited from a large Southern university in the United States to discuss one of four topics (e.g., a stressful life event, risky sexual behavior, loss of a loved one, discuss a traumatic event) with a peer so that the processes among contextual factors, supportive message content, and supportive message processing could be examined. The association between contextual factors on how individuals processed a supportive interaction was mediated by the content of the supportive conversation. Limitations, strengths, and implications were discussed.
438

A case study on how psychological factors affect the individual language production of English as a foreign language for upper secondary students, and how the inclusion of didactics can support these students’ learning.

Lind, Towe January 2022 (has links)
Psychological factors and their appearance in upper secondary English education are the focus of this study to collect knowledge regarding the effects on written and oral language production among upper secondary students. Three specific factors are mainly covered, videlicet depression, stress, and anxiety. This issue was selected because of personal interest, furthermore, to collect knowledge and didactic tools regarding the area. The psychological factors are explained in the study and thereafter explored in the context of upper secondary students, specifically in their English language production. The study targets upper secondary students and the psychological factors affecting their language production in English, therefore the survey research had this specific age group as correspondents. The survey included was constructed to collect the quantitative data necessary to answer the research questions. The study involves suggestions for didactical improvements for teachers to consider in future education to be able to support the students suffering from psychological factors. The results observed a presence of psychological factors in the majority of cases and severe effects of it during language production in English.
439

What Is the Relationship between Learning Spelling and Meaning Incidentally during Reading?

de Long, Shauna P. A. 05 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
440

Is Le Maison Acceptable?: The Representation and Processing of Grammatical Gender In French Speakers

Manning, Gabrielle 22 January 2024 (has links)
Grammatical gender is a complex classification system and is often referred to as one of the most difficult grammatical categories for second language (L2) speakers to master. Previous research has focused on anticipatory processing of grammatical gender cues in first language (L1) speakers of various gendered languages (French, Spanish, Dutch, etc.) and has found that speakers use gender information from a preceding determiner to facilitate access to a gender-congruent noun (e.g., Dussias et al., 2013; Lew-Williams & Fernald, 2010). These findings have been consistently found among speakers of various languages when they were presented with congruent vs. incongruent determiner phrases (DPs), subsequently collapsing across grammatical genders (e.g., congruent: la maison and le bateau vs. incongruent: *le maison vs. *la bateau). Responses to individual genders cues in Spanish has been teased apart (masculine vs. feminine) as well as the effect of inhibitory control on gender processing (Beatty-Martínez, et al., 2020). A correlation between grammatical gender error recovery and increased inhibitory control was found. The current dissertation aims to dissect the processing and underlying neural mechanisms associated with masculine and feminine grammatical gender in L1 French, simultaneous French-English, and L1 English-L2 French speakers. A series of three experiments were conducted. The first two experiments used a masked priming lexical decision task where participants were presented with congruent (e.g., la maison) and incongruent (*le maison) DPs. The first experiment employed a behavioural version of the task and the second experiment focused on event-related brain potentials (ERPs). At a behavioural level, there was no indication of grammatical gender cue use. However, ERP results show that L1 speakers employ distinct processing mechanisms for feminine (P200; *le maison) incongruencies compared to feminine congruencies (la maison). The final experiment consisted of a self-paced reading task, where participants read sentences with congruent and incongruent DPs and an AX-CPT task as a measure of inhibitory control. L1 French and simultaneous French-English speakers exhibit processing difficulties with the incongruent feminine condition (*le maison) compared to the congruent feminine condition (la maison), as well as with the incongruent masculine condition (*la bateau) compared to the congruent masculine condition (le bateau). On the other hand, L2 speakers only show difficulty with the incongruent feminine condition in relation to the congruent feminine condition. Further, there was no relationship between inhibitory control and grammatical gender processing across groups. Overall, the results reflect an intricate picture of grammatical gender processing in French speakers. At a lexical level, L1 French speakers likely process incongruent feminine DPs as a lexical clash, potentially implementing further cognitive resources during processing. At a syntactic level, L1 French and simultaneous French-English speakers show processing difficulties behaviourally to gender incongruencies. L2 speakers seem to employ the use of masculine grammatical gender cues, implying that it is perhaps the presence of a feminine noun causing processing difficulty due to a feature mismatch. These results indicate that masculine and feminine genders employ distinct processing mechanisms and may be accessed in a contrasting manner.

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