348 results
Search Results
2. Philosophical underpinnings of intersubjectivity and its significance to phenomenological research: A discussion paper.
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Tembo, Agness Chisanga, Gullick, Janice, and Pendon, Joseph Francis
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PARTICIPANT-researcher relationships , *LANGUAGE & languages , *PHILOSOPHY of nursing , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *NURSING research , *ONTOLOGIES (Information retrieval) , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
Intersubjectivity is the proposition that human experience occurs in a world of shared and embodied understandings, mediated by culture and language. Nursing is fundamentally relational, and nursing research stems from an exchange between participants and researchers and indeed around the transaction of the patient and the nurse in the intersubjective space of clinical settings. Through the philosophical standpoints of Husserl, Merleau‐Ponty, Heidegger, and Gadamer we examine these differing philosophical constructs of intersubjectivity and the contribution of these positions to phenomenological nursing inquiry. Particular framings of intersubjectivity should influence the way researchers interact with their participants and data so that the chosen philosophy sits coherently within a research plan and methodology. This exploration of philosophical standpoints is extended through examples of, and reflections upon, the authors' experiences of intersubjectivity in our published phenomenological nursing studies and through dynamic interactions that characterise interpretive activities within a research team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Titles in research articles: Changes across time and discipline.
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Jiang, Feng Kevin and Hyland, Ken
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ACADEMIC discourse ,SCHOLARLY publishing ,SCHOLARLY periodicals ,AUTHORS ,DISCOURSE analysis ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Titles are a crucial feature of research papers and have become increasingly important with changes in publishing practices and the explosion of published research. As a result, novice writers seeking to get their work noticed in international journals might benefit from a clear understanding of the features of research titles and an awareness of the relationship between language and disciplinary context. In this study, we explore this relationship and the impact of changing contexts on titles across the last 60 years on the length, form and content of 36,000 titles from the 10 leading journals from six disciplines spread along a soft‐hard science continuum. Our results show a considerable increase in the length of titles coupled with more interrogative and compound titles in almost all disciplines. There has also been a growing mention of methods in the titles of hard knowledge papers with more frequent inclusion of results in the softer domains. These diachronic changes can be attributed to different characteristics of the fields and of the changing dynamics of the publishing context. Our findings have important implications for early career academics seeking to publish in English and contribute to studies of diachronic analysis of academic discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. More than words: Geopolitics and language.
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Medby, Ingrid A. and Thornton, Pip
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GEOPOLITICS ,SPEECH ,LANGUAGE & languages ,AUTOMATIC speech recognition ,POLITICAL geography ,VOCABULARY - Abstract
In this editorial introduction, we introduce the special section on Geopolitics and Language. We provide a brief overview of some of the ways in which geopolitical scholarship has engaged with themes of language to date, noting in particular the legacy of critical geopolitics – and indeed work that has emerged from its foundation. Further we discuss language itself, a concept we suggest is often implicit but rarely explicitly considered in geographical work. That is, despite rich bodies of work on, for example, the textual and discursive, there is still much to explore in the broader sense of the linguistic. This includes a growing body of work on speech and sound, translation, and decolonisation – all of which also point to the need to go further in geographical and geopolitical engagement with language. The aim of the paper, however, is finally to introduce the section's papers and their specific theoretical and empirical concerns. And this, we argue, is more than words of introduction but also an invitation – to further engagement and geopolitical curiosity. This editorial introduction outlines the journal special section on Geopolitics and Language. It introduces the four contributing papers and situates these in the conceptual concern of the section. It discusses the role of language in geography, and specifically the study of geopolitics, and calls for further engagement with the concepts of language and language‐use – also beyond the ways in which they have been approached to date. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Why language matters in alcohol research: Reducing stigma.
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Shi, Hannah D., McKee, Sherry A., and Cosgrove, Kelly P.
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ALCOHOLISM ,SOCIAL stigma ,LANGUAGE & languages ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PATIENT compliance ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Background: The use of pejorative or stigmatizing language to describe individuals with alcohol and drug use disorders adversely affects treatment seeking, quality of care, and treatment outcomes. In 2015, the International Society of Addiction Journal Editors released terminology guidelines that recommended against the use of words that contribute to stigma against individuals with an addictive disorder. This study examined the use of stigmatizing language in National Institutes of Health (NIH)‐funded research and reviews published by the journal, Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research (ACER) from 2010 to 2020, with the goal of sharing the results with the alcohol research community to enhance awareness. Methods: The search for stigmatizing language in ACER was limited to NIH‐funded articles made publicly available on PubMed Central (PMC). Though ACER is not an open‐access journal, original research and reviews directly funded by NIH are published to PMC for open access to the public as required by the conditions of NIH funding. ACER articles published on PMC were searched from 2010 to 2020 with specific queries for individual terms of interest including those considered pejorative ("alcoholic," "addict," and "abuser") and outdated ("alcohol dependent," "alcohol abuse," and "alcoholism"). The number of articles containing a term of interest for a given year was divided by the total number of articles published in that year to determine the percent use of each term per year. Results: Our search of research and reviews (n = 1903) published in ACER on PMC determined that although the use of pejorative and outdated terminology has decreased over time, there is continued use of the term "alcoholic" over the last decade. Specifically, in 2020, over 40% of articles searched for in PMC still included "alcoholic." The results of a separate manual search (n = 110) on the Wiley Online Database showed that approximately 30% of articles used the term "alcoholic" in a stigmatizing manner. Conclusions: Stigmatizing language can perpetuate negative biases against people with alcohol use disorder. We encourage researchers to shift away from language that maintains discriminatory conceptions of alcohol use disorder. Reducing stigma has the potential to increase rates of treatment seeking and improve treatment outcomes for individuals with alcohol use disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Beyond transparency: more‐than‐human insights into the emergence of young children's language.
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CHILDREN ,FAMILIES ,LANGUAGE & languages ,BASIC education ,DECOLONIZATION - Abstract
This paper draws on 3 years of ethnographic research with young children and their families in a northern English town, employing a more‐than‐human lens to pay attention to what, beyond humans, might be involved in the emergence of children's literacies. The paper focuses on the role of the body and place in the emergence of young children's vocalisations and talk. In particular, the paper rethinks the dominant assumption that children's language is primarily for the purpose of transparently conveying meaning. It does this by drawing on posthuman and decolonial scholarship on childhood and language, and particularly on the work of Glissant on opacity and difference, in order to interrogate the relationship between expression, understanding and power. Thus, the paper outlines how an understanding of the relationship between body, place and talk might inform pedagogy by highlighting the need for space to embrace divergent, complicated, irrational, playful and non‐functional language practices in early childhood, rather than looking for rapid, straight line development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Toxic language detection: A systematic review of Arabic datasets.
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Bensalem, Imene, Rosso, Paolo, and Zitouni, Hanane
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ARABIC language , *LANGUAGE & languages , *SCIENTIFIC community , *HATE speech - Abstract
The detection of toxic language in the Arabic language has emerged as an active area of research in recent years, and reviewing the existing datasets employed for training the developed solutions has become a pressing need. This paper offers a comprehensive survey of Arabic datasets focused on online toxic language. We systematically gathered a total of 54 available datasets and their corresponding papers and conducted a thorough analysis, considering 18 criteria across four primary dimensions: availability details, content, annotation process, and reusability. This analysis enabled us to identify existing gaps and make recommendations for future research works. For the convenience of the research community, the list of the analysed datasets is maintained in a GitHub repository. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. An exploratory study of longitudinal trajectory of language, swallowing and cognition post endovascular clot retrieval.
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D'Netto, Pamela, Finch, Emma, Rumbach, Anna, and Copland, David A.
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LANGUAGE & languages , *DISABILITIES , *NIH Stroke Scale , *STATISTICAL correlation , *COGNITIVE testing , *DATA analysis , *FUNCTIONAL assessment , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *APHASIA , *HOSPITALS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *QUALITY of life , *RESEARCH , *LANGUAGE disorders , *COGNITION disorders , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *FRIEDMAN test (Statistics) , *STATISTICS , *DEGLUTITION , *THROMBECTOMY , *STROKE , *STROKE patients , *REPERFUSION , *DATA analysis software , *DEGLUTITION disorders , *DIET , *NONPARAMETRIC statistics , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Endovascular clot retrieval (ECR) is known to reduce global disability at 3 months post stroke however limited research exists regarding the trajectory of specific clinical impairments including language, swallowing and cognitive deficits between onset and 3 months. Aims: To assess language, swallowing, and cognitive performance following ECR and explore whether impairment severity is correlated with modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score (mTICI), stroke severity or quality of life (QoL). Methods: Assessment was completed within 7 days (T1), 1 month (T2) and 3 months (T3) post‐stroke. Performance was measured with the Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS), Repeatable Battery for Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS), Trail Making Test (TMT A and B) and Brixton Spatial Awareness Test. The Western Aphasia Battery (WAB) was used for left hemisphere stroke. QoL was measured with the Stroke and Aphasia Quality of Life Scale. Results: Twenty‐five participants (median 72 years; 64% male) were prospectively recruited following ECR. High reperfusion success (68% mTICI 3) and low stroke severity post ECR (median 24 h NIHSS = 3, IQR 7–18) were noted. At T1, 10 participants presented with aphasia, eight required a modified diet and 20 had impaired cognition. At T3 all had recovered to a normal oral diet, 39% had persistent cognitive impairment and 45% of patients with left hemisphere stroke remained aphasic. Performance on the WAB, FOIS, RBANS and TMT changed significantly over time (all p < 0.05). The severity score at T1 for all measures, excluding TMT B and Brixton, was significantly correlated with 24 h NIHSS. WAB scores at T3 were correlated with QoL (r = 0.618; p = 0.043). Conclusion: This exploratory study found the longitudinal performance of language, swallowing and cognition significantly improved over time and severity in the first‐week post‐ECR was correlated with 24 h NIHSS rather than the degree of reperfusion. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Randomised control trials have demonstrated the benefit of ECR in patients with ischemic stroke using global measures of disability and function. Limited research exists regarding the trajectory of specific clinical impairments including language, swallowing and cognitive deficits. There is also a reliance on screening assessments and a lack of consideration of the influence of co‐occurring impairments. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This prospective study is amongst the first to explore the longitudinal trajectory of language, swallowing and cognitive impairment using a standardised assessment battery. Twenty‐four‐hour NIHSS was significantly correlated with language, swallowing, global cognition and some measures of executive function. Language performance post ECR was correlated with domain‐specific cognitive assessment of attention, immediate memory and delayed memory, which differed from swallowing performance post ECR that correlated with measures of executive function. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: It is important for speech‐language pathologists and the wider medical team to monitor language, swallowing and cognitive performance post ECR regardless of treatment success. Stroke severity at 24 h post‐ECR influences the severity of language, swallowing and cognitive impairments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Language and symbolic boundaries among transnational elites: A qualitative case study of European Commission officials.
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Drewski, Daniel
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EUROPEAN integration , *QUALITATIVE research , *FRENCH language , *ENGLISH language , *LANGUAGE & languages , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
Previous research has asked whether European integration leads to the formation of a new kind of 'transnational class' or 'elite' in and around the European institutions in Brussels. This paper focuses instead on intra‐group distinctions and symbolic boundaries between EU professionals from different countries. Drawing on Bourdieu's notion of language as a marker of distinction, it argues that language continues to be a resource for symbolic boundary making. Empirically, this paper builds on in‐depth interviews with officials of the European Commission, who are at the heart of an emerging transnational elite of EU professionals. It shows that while Commission officials are multilingual and use multilingualism to construct themselves as a transnational group, intra‐group symbolic boundaries continue to be drawn based on competence in the Commission's two main working languages, English and French. Overall, this paper points out the overlooked importance of language differences for transnational professionals' symbolic boundary making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. The lexical content of high‐stakes national exams in French, German, and Spanish in England.
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Dudley, Amber and Marsden, Emma
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LANGUAGE & languages ,HIGH-stakes tests ,WORD frequency ,SPANISH language - Abstract
Surprisingly little is known about the number and frequency level of words that beginner‐to‐low‐intermediate 16‐year‐old learners of French, German, and Spanish are expected to know when taking high‐stakes national exams in England. This study presents exploratory analyses of the lexical content of the listening and reading tests of these exams, a corpus totaling 116,647 running words. Specifically, it seeks to understand the number and frequency level of words that (a) this demographic seems to be expected to know and (b) could be needed for awarding organizations to create exams year‐on‐year. Key findings include that the proportion of low(er)‐frequency words in the corpus of exam papers seemed large, given the stage of the learners and the purpose of the assessments. Critically, these low(er)‐frequency words changed at a high rate between papers, likely incurring a heavy reliance on the lexical inferencing abilities of these relatively inexperienced language learners. The Challenge: Every year, approximately 250,000 16‐year‐olds in England sit high‐stakes exams in French, German, and Spanish. But how many and what kinds of words do these learners need to know to understand the listening and reading exam texts? And how often do these words change year‐on‐year? This article aims to address these questions by analyzing a corpus of exam papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. The "Greenberg Controversy" and the Interdisciplinary Study of Global Linguistic Relationships**.
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Kaplan, Judith R. H.
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LINGUISTICS ,LANGUAGE & languages ,INDIGENOUS languages of the Americas ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,ANTHROPOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper examines the controversy that followed the 1987 publication of Joseph Greenberg's book, Language in the Americas, attending to the role of language and linguistic research within overlapping disciplinary traditions. With this text, Greenberg presented a macro‐level tripartite classification that opposed then dominant fine‐grained analyses recognizing anywhere from 150 to 200 distinct language families. His proposal was the subject of a landmark conference, examining strengths and weaknesses, the unpublished proceedings of which are presented here for the first time. For specialists in the anthropological and comparative‐historical study of Indigenous American languages, Greenberg's intervention highlighted the tension between language, conceived as an abstract object of study, and languages, understood to be carriers of specific cultural knowledge. For physical anthropologists and archaeologists, his theory was initially fortuitous on programmatic, substantive, and methodological grounds. The essay will show how interdisciplinary appeals were figured by supporters as a virtue, and by critics as a vice. The essay further highlights ethical reasons for integrating historical narratives of science and the humanities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. They Are Talking, But Is It Productive? Exploring EFL Students' Small Group Talk.
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Wotring, Anthony, Chen, Honglin, and Fraser, Mark
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ENGLISH as a foreign language ,ENGLISH language ,PRESSURE groups ,LANGUAGE & languages ,STUDENTS - Abstract
Curricular innovations in English language programs have placed increasing emphasis on providing opportunities for students to speak in the classroom, often through communicative group activities. However, despite decades of advocacy for small group talk, a rigorous conception of the quality of talk in these groups is lacking, particularly in the ways students productively use talk to meet curriculum objectives. This paper presents an analytic framework for characterizing the productive use of small group talk, exploring data collected from English language learning students in a South Korean university. Findings demonstrate the students' talk developed in the robustness of the talk repertoires, the collaborative nature, and the connections of their talk to course outcomes. This paper closes with a discussion exploring English language students' talk, challenging current understandings of students' talk abilities by pushing beyond simple communication in a foreign language and towards productive small group talk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. The association of cognitive abilities with language disorder in 8‐year‐old children: A population‐based clinical sample.
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Jin, Fufen, Schjølberg, Synnve, Eadie, Patricia, Bang Nes, Ragnhild, Barbo Valand, Stian, Røysamb, Espen, and Vulchanova, Mila
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COGNITION disorders diagnosis ,LANGUAGE disorder diagnosis ,RESEARCH ,NONVERBAL communication ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,COGNITION ,LANGUAGE & languages ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LANGUAGE disorders ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Despite accumulated evidence that language development depends on basic cognitive processes, the balance in contributions of verbal and non‐verbal cognitive skills to language abilities is still underexplored. Little is known about which cognitive measures best predict the degree of severity in children with language disorder (LD). Aims: To examine the association between verbal and non‐verbal cognitive abilities with language abilities in typically developing and language impaired 8‐year‐old children, as well as which cognitive abilities are most effective in distinguishing LD severity levels. Methods & Procedures: Children (N = 509) from the Language‐8 Study, which oversampled probable cases of children with LD from a population‐based cohort in Norway, were assessed at 8 years. Language skills were assessed using the Norwegian Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals—4 (CELF‐4). Children's verbal and non‐verbal cognitive abilities were assessed via standardized cognitive measures. An exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was first conducted to uncover the underlying factor structure of the cognitive variables. Using a hierarchical multiple regression analysis, we then examined to what extent the non‐verbal cognition factor explained language abilities above and beyond verbal cognition factors. Lastly, multinomial logistic regression was used to examine which cognitive measures best predicted the degree of severity in the children with LD. Outcomes & Results: The EFA resulted in three factors (Verbal Cognition, Processing Speed and Memory, and Non‐Verbal Cognition). The hierarchical multiple regression analysis revealed that all three cognitive factors contributed significantly to individual variation in language abilities. Non‐Verbal Cognition explained 5.4% variance in language abilities above and beyond that accounted for by Verbal Cognition and Processing Speed and Memory. Results from the multinomial logistic regression analysis indicated that cognitive subtests, including Familiar Sequences, WASI Vocabulary and WASI Similarities, not only distinguished LD from typically developing children, but were also efficient in distinguishing severity of LD symptoms. Conclusions & Implications: This study confirms concurrent links between language and non‐verbal cognitive skills above and beyond the contribution of verbal cognitive skills. The results provide further evidence that children with LD experience both language and cognitive problems in mid‐childhood. Our findings suggest implications for LD intervention and diagnosis. The findings support the importance of measuring both verbal and non‐verbal cognitive skills when making an LD diagnosis, and point to the potential of targeting underlying cognitive skills as one strategy to support language abilities. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Language development is dependent on basic cognitive processes. These include both verbal and non‐verbal cognitive abilities. Children with LD often experience both language and cognitive problems. There is evidence that performance on cognitive tests may be associated with the degree of severity of LD. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: The current results from a large population‐based cohort establish that a number of verbal and non‐verbal cognitive abilities are tightly linked to variation in language abilities and the degree of severity of LD. Our study confirms concurrent links between language and non‐verbal cognitive abilities above and beyond the contribution of verbal cognitive abilities. We also identify specific verbal and non‐verbal cognitive tests that distinguish between typical children and children with LD, as well as LD severity. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Our findings support the importance of measuring both verbal and non‐verbal cognitive skills when making an LD diagnosis. Our findings also point to the potential of targeting underlying cognitive skills as one strategy to support language abilities. We suggest that future intervention studies focus on the impact of non‐verbal cognitive skills on language development in children with LD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. A scoping review of oral language and social communication abilities in children with Tourette syndrome.
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Feehan, Angela and Charest, Monique
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CINAHL database , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *LANGUAGE & languages , *TOURETTE syndrome , *TASK performance , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *VERBAL behavior , *SOCIAL skills , *LITERATURE reviews , *MEDLINE , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Children with Tourette syndrome (TS) have historically experienced problems in academic and social settings, yet their language and communication abilities have not been extensively researched. Aims: This scoping review maps the literature on the oral language and social communication abilities of children with TS in order to describe the nature of the current literature, present a summary of major findings and identify where gaps exist. Methods: A scoping review was completed to identify studies measuring the oral language or social communication abilities of children with TS. A systematic search of six electronic databases was conducted to obtain published and unpublished literature. All English studies measuring the oral language or social communication abilities of children with TS were included. Information was extracted from records and knowledge was synthesised in a narrative summary. Main Contribution: We identified 56 records for inclusion. Almost all records were located in journals within the fields of psychology and psychiatry. Skills most often studied were verbal IQ and verbal fluency. The literature suggests an increased prevalence of language disorders and social communication problems in children with TS; however, literature comprehensively detailing these challenges was scarce. Language strengths were identified in verbal intelligence, story/sentence recall, categorisation and performance on tasks at the single‐word level. Conclusions: Oral language and social communication skills are important for academic and social success. This review brings scattered literature together to provide up‐to‐date information about language in children with TS and highlights that there are considerable gaps in our knowledge about language and communication in this population. This scoping review can inform future research and support speech language pathologists in the assessment of young people with TS. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Speech‐language pathologists (SLPs) working in various contexts (e.g., schools, mental health teams) are likely to encounter children with Tourette syndrome (TS); however, the description of this population and potential communication characteristics is not well represented in the SLP literature. Previous literature reviews have reported strengths in verbal fluency and morphological processing. Challenges in expressive language, higher order language, social cognition and a propensity towards autistic traits have also been identified. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This review differs from previous narrative reviews by employing a systematic approach to searching for literature. As a result, we identified 25 additional studies that had not been cited in previous reviews and additional relevant findings in 23 previously reviewed studies. This review confirms several previous conclusions about language in children with TS and extends or clarifies several others, thereby providing the most current information on oral language and social communication abilities. The use of current taxonomies of language and social communication helps to organise this literature for clinicians and researchers in speech‐language pathology and identifies a need for further research from the SLP perspective. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: These results imply that SLPs should screen children with TS for language disorders and investigate social communication and social interaction development. Clinicians can expect greater challenges in language and communication development for children with complex forms of TS (i.e., those who exhibit co‐occurring conditions such as attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder). The multidisciplinary nature of the current literature implies that clinical collaboration with other disciplines will be of particular benefit to serving this group of children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Who cares for the carer? Codesigning a carer health and wellbeing clinic for older care partners of older people in Australia.
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Layton, Natasha, Lalor, Aislinn, Slatyer, Susan, Lee, Den‐Ching A, Bryant, Christina, Watson, Moira, Khushu, Anjali, Burton, Elissa, Oliveira, Déborah, Brusco, Natasha L., Jacinto, Alessandro, Tiller, Elizabeth, and Hill, Keith D.
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CAREGIVER attitudes ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,MEETINGS ,SOCIAL support ,FOCUS groups ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,TELEPHONES ,MEDICAL care ,EXECUTIVES ,HEALTH status indicators ,VIDEOCONFERENCING ,CLINICS ,INTERVIEWING ,LANGUAGE & languages ,QUALITATIVE research ,EXPERIENCE ,SURVEYS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,HEALTH ,AGING ,RESEARCH funding ,NEEDS assessment ,JUDGMENT sampling ,POLICY sciences ,DATA analysis software ,ADULT education workshops ,EMAIL - Abstract
Introduction: Older carers or 'care partners' of older people experiencing care needs often provide essential support, at times while neglecting their own health and well‐being. This is an increasingly frequent scenario due to both demographic changes and policy shifts towards ageing in place. Multiple community stakeholders within the care and support ecosystem hold valuable expertise about the needs of older care partners, and the programme and policy responses that may better support their health and well‐being. The aim of this study was to identify the perspectives of stakeholders obtained through the codesign phase of a multicomponent research project investigating new models of care and support for older care partners suitable for the Australian context. Methods: Principles of codesign were used to engage a purposeful sample of older care partners, health professionals, researchers, policy makers and health service administrators. Participants took part in a series of three codesign workshops conducted remotely via video conferencing. The workshops were supported with briefing material and generated consensus‐based summaries, arriving at a preferred service model. Findings: This paper reports the research design and structure of the codesign panels, the range of findings identified as important to support the health and well‐being of older carers of older people, and the resulting service model principles. The codesigned and preferred model of care is currently being prepared for implementation and evaluation in Australia. Public Contribution: This study was conducted using codesign methodology, whereby stakeholders including older care partners and others involved in supporting older carers, were integrally involved with design, development, results and conclusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. A randomized controlled trial of the effectiveness of teacher continued professional development on student language outcomes.
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Sandgren, Olof, Andersson, Ketty, Lyberg Åhlander, Viveka, Rosqvist, Ida, Hansson, Kristina, and Sahlén, Birgitta
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SCHOOL environment ,STATISTICS ,TEACHING methods ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,ANALYSIS of variance ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,LANGUAGE & languages ,SPEECH evaluation ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,T-test (Statistics) ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,TEACHERS ,STUDENTS ,COMMUNICATION ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,REPEATED measures design ,STATISTICAL sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
Background: Continued professional development (CPD) is required for updated skills and knowledge. This study evaluates the efficacy of a CPD programme for mainstream school teachers. Aims: In an 11‐week intervention programme, speech–language therapists (SLTs) presented the participating teachers with whole‐class teaching techniques aimed at creating a language and communication‐supporting classroom environment. The effects of the intervention on the language development of the students in the teachers' classes were assessed. Methods & Procedures: A total of 211 first‐ and second‐year students (Mage = 7;6, range = 6;5–8;9) underwent standardized language assessments of receptive and expressive language abilities before and after their teachers' participation in the CPD. The students were divided into intervention and delayed intervention groups to enable randomized intervention allocation. Linear mixed modelling was used to estimate the individual and interaction effects of group, time and demographic factors. Outcomes & Results: Significant effects of time, group and school, respectively, but no interaction between time and group indicates that while all students advanced between assessments, the progress was not attributable to the teachers' participation in the CPD. Conclusions & Implications: Results are discussed in light of those of recent studies of universal services to support optimal language development. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: Although inconclusive, previous research indicates that intervention delivered to teachers by SLTs has the potential to improve the language abilities of the students in the teachers' classrooms. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study explored the language development of first‐ and second‐year mainstream school students whose teachers took part in a CPD programme aimed at establishing language and communication‐supporting teaching techniques. Results indicate that the development of the students' language abilities could not be attributed to the teachers' participation in the CPD. What are the potential or actual implications of the work?: SLTs are often asked to guide teachers and teaching staff rather than themselves conduct individual assessments and interventions. The results of this trial can be used to inform the discussion on how to prioritize between tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. The discourse of the Other in Martin McDonagh's The Pillowman.
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Kolahjooei, Farzad
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DISCOURSE ,PSYCHOANALYSIS ,DESIRE ,LANGUAGE & languages ,DEFINITIONS - Abstract
As a key term in Lacanian psychoanalysis, the concept of the Other regulates the subject's desire. While it is absent as a physical entity, it commands and shapes the individual's psyche via language unconsciously. This paper provides a close reading of Martin McDonagh's The Pillowman to explore the ways everyone in the play is under the control of the discourse of the Other. To do so, this paper provides a theoretical structure based on Lacan's definition of the term and its relationship to language and signification to finally view its various manifestations in McDonagh's play. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Scoping study of definitions and instruments measuring vulnerability in older adults.
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Levasseur, Mélanie, Lussier‐Therrien, Marika, Biron, Marie Lee, Dubois, Marie‐France, Boissy, Patrick, Naud, Daniel, Dubuc, Nicole, Coallier, Jean‐Claude, Calvé, Jessica, and Audet, Mélisa
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CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,SOCIAL participation ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,RESEARCH methodology ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LANGUAGE & languages ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: It is important to foster social participation and health equity, especially for older adults in situations of vulnerability. Despite growing interest in vulnerability, there is no consensus regarding how to define or measure this concept. This paper provides an inventory and synthesis of definitions of and instruments measuring vulnerability in older adults. Methods: Using a scoping study framework, eight databases (Abstracts in Social Gerontology, Academic Search Complete, AgeLine, CINAHL, MEDLINE, SocINDEX, PsycInfo, Scopus) were searched with relevant keywords [Vulnerab* AND (Concept*, Defin*, Meaning, Terminology, Measurement, Assessment*, Indicator*, Instrument*, Scale*, Questionnaire* OR Test*) AND (Aging, Aging, Elder*, Gerontolog*, Older OR Senior*)]. Results: Thirty‐one original definitions and five measuring instruments were identified, content‐analyzed, and compared. Vulnerability definitions mostly focused on people under conditions that increased their risk of harm because of individual physical factors, the environment, and their interaction. Considering these definitions, experts in the field of aging, including two representing older adults, participated in a workshop, and a consensus was reached to define a situation of vulnerability as "a set of circumstances in which one or more individuals experience, at a specific moment in time, one or multiple physiological, psychological, socioeconomic or social difficulties that may interact to increase their risk of being harmed or having coping challenges that have a negative impact on their life." Although none of the measures fully targeted this definition, the Perceived Vulnerability Scale (PVS) is one of the most complete measures, with 22 items considering feelings of vulnerability toward personal and environmental factors, and good psychometric properties. Conclusions: The proposed definition and the PVS help to provide a common language and measure in health and social sciences research, policy and practice identifying and reaching older adults in situations of vulnerability and intervening to foster social participation and health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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19. Speech, language and communication needs and mental health: the experiences of speech and language therapists and mental health professionals.
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Hancock, Annabel, Northcott, Sarah, Hobson, Hannah, and Clarke, Michael
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MENTAL illness treatment ,TREATMENT of learning disabilities ,TREATMENT of language disorders ,ANXIETY treatment ,TREATMENT of autism ,WELL-being ,GRIEF ,THERAPEUTICS ,COUNSELING ,DEGLUTITION ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,WORK ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,INTERVIEWING ,LANGUAGE & languages ,COGNITION ,QUALITATIVE research ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,SOUND recordings ,NEEDS assessment ,PLAY therapy ,THEMATIC analysis ,EMOTIONS ,REFLEXIVITY ,SPEECH therapists ,MENTAL health services ,BEREAVEMENT ,VIDEO recording - Abstract
Background: While the relationship between speech, language and communication needs (SLCN) and mental health difficulties has been recognized, speech and language therapists (SLTs), and mental health professionals face challenges in assessing and treating children with these co‐occurring needs. There exists a gap in the evidence base for best practice for professionals working with children and young people (CYP) who experience difficulties in both areas. Aims: To explore the views of SLTs and mental health clinicians about their experiences of working with CYP exhibiting co‐occurring SLCN and mental health difficulties. Methods & Procedures: Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with eight SLTs and six mental health professionals, including psychotherapists, clinical psychologists, play therapists and counsellors, with experience working with CYP with SLCN. Interviews were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis and themes were identified from the data. Outcomes & Results: Participants felt that SLCN and mental health difficulties frequently co‐occur. Participants described how CYP with SLCN and mental health issues commonly experience difficulties across and between the domains of language and cognition, emotional well‐being and challenging behaviour. Findings suggest that there are organizational limitations in the fields of SLT and mental health that have implications for the efficacy of assessment and treatment of CYP with SLCN and mental health difficulties. Traditional talking therapies were perceived to be inaccessible and ineffective for CYP with SLCN and mental health difficulties. Interventions blending behaviour and emotion programmes with language and communication interventions were considered potentially beneficial. Conclusions & Implications: Future research should explore and evaluate current services and service set‐up in SLT and mental health. The findings from this study have important implications for the efficacy of treatments provided to this population suggesting that more research needs to be done into effective diagnosis and interventions for this population. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Research suggests that CYP with SLCN, such as developmental language disorder (DLD), are likely to experience mental health difficulties including depression, anxiety and poor emotional well‐being. CYP who experience difficulties with SLCN and poor mental health are not well understood and this area remains under‐researched. This has implications for clinician knowledge and therefore the effective diagnosis and treatment of children and adolescents experiencing SLCN and mental health difficulties. In addition, little is known about the accessibility of talking therapies to CYP presenting with SLCN and mental health difficulties. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: SLCN issues are understood by SLTs and mental health issues are understood by mental health professionals, but where these co‐occur difficulties exist for the diagnostic process, with professionals perceiving that CYP in this category are often undiagnosed or misdiagnosed. Organizational boundaries between SLT and mental health were perceived to contribute to a lack of understanding of SLCN and mental health needs, which has implications for effective diagnosis and treatment. Traditional talking therapies were thought to be inaccessible for CYP with SLCN and mental health difficulties. Interventions used in both SLT and psychotherapy were perceived as clinically useful if combined. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: This paper highlights implications for the accessibility and efficacy of the assessment and treatment provided to this population and to the organization of services currently treating this group of CYP. A direction for future research would be to undertake service evaluations and intervention‐based studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Political dimensions of gender inclusive writing in Parisian universities.
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Burnett, Heather and Pozniak, Céline
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CULTURAL pluralism ,WRITTEN communication ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,FEMINISM ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Sociolinguistics is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2021
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21. Dynamic association between phonemic awareness and disordered speech recognition moderated by transcription training.
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Chen, Yu‐Ju and Yeh, Lili
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- *
SPEECH perception , *COMPUTER software , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *HEALTH occupations students , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SPEECH evaluation , *LANGUAGE & languages , *TASK performance , *REGRESSION analysis , *UNDERGRADUATES , *ABILITY , *TRAINING , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *RISK assessment , *T-test (Statistics) , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *SEX distribution , *PHONETICS , *SIGNS & symbols , *TEACHING aids , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *AUDIOLOGISTS , *DATA analysis software , *MUSIC , *STATISTICAL models , *SPEECH therapists ,SPEECH disorder diagnosis - Abstract
Background: Phonetic transcription of disordered speech samples is especially crucial for the assessment and treatment of functional or organic speech‐sound disorders. Previous studies show that students who struggle with the identification and segmentation of speech sounds are more likely to encounter difficulties with clinical phonetic transcription. Aims: To clarify the connection between phonemic awareness and phonetic transcription in Mandarin‐speaking undergraduate students, as well as the improvement of these skills after phonetic transcription training. Methods & Procedures: A pretest–post‐test design was adopted for this study. The experimental group (n = 38) consisted of students majoring in audiology and speech–language pathology who were given 12 weeks of transcription training. The control group (n = 33) consisted of audiology and speech–language pathology majors who completed the same module a year earlier without undergoing the transcription training. Two instruments were used to assess their skills: (1) the Phonemic Awareness Skill Test (PA test) and (2) the Phonetic Transcription Skill Test (PT test) designed for the purposes of the present study. Outcomes & Results: Performance on most subtests of the PT and PA tests improved significantly at post‐test for the experiment group, although only PT training was provided. After phonetic transcription training, the relationship between phonemic addition abilities and phonetic transcription strengthened. Phonemic identification was found to be a predictor of undergraduate students' PT skills of disordered speech samples. Conclusions & Implications: Results from this study provide insights into the role of phonetic transcription training in improving phonemic awareness and phonetic transcription skills. What This Paper Adds: What is already known on the subject: Phonetic transcription of disordered speech samples is especially crucial for the assessment and treatment of functional or organic speech‐sound disorders. Phonemic awareness is not only an essential ability for reading alphabetic language but also associated with acquiring phonetic transcription skills. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: A dynamically changing association between phonemic transcription and phonetic transcription during transcription training was reported. Phonetic transcription training of disordered speech samples acted as a driving force for deeper relationships between the two skills. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Training phonetic recognition and transcription equips future and practising speech–language pathologists with better skills in managing speech‐sound disorders. Implications for phonemic awareness training also have the potential to extend to the literacy skills of alphabetic language speakers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. Structural linguistic injustice.
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Song, Seunghyun
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- *
SOCIAL injustice , *ATTITUDES toward language , *LANGUAGE attrition , *LINGUISTIC context , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
This paper develops a concept of structural linguistic injustice. By employing the so‐called structural‐injustice approach, it argues that individuals' seemingly harmless language attitudes and language choices might enable serious harms on a collective level, constituting what one could call a structural linguistic injustice. Section 1 introduces the linguistic‐justice debate. By doing so, it establishes linguistic diversity as the context in which phenomena such as individuals' language attitudes, language choice, and language loss occur. Moreover, the paper illustrates why employing the structural‐injustice approach might be beneficial for the linguistic‐justice debate. Section 2 conceptualizes individuals' (certain types of) language attitudes and language choice as (objectionable) social structures. Section 3 provides a concept of structural linguistic injustice. Section 4 suggests one possible remedy for structural linguistic injustice. Section 5 concludes the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Pre‐departure language requirements for family reunification.
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van den Berg, Tamara
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- *
POLITICAL participation , *FAMILY reunification , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
This paper argues that pre‐departure language requirements for family reunification are unjustified. Such requirements are assumed to safeguard (1) the non‐instrumental cultural interests of citizens of the receiving society and (2) the instrumental language interests of both citizens and immigrants, for democratic life and political participation. The paper explores nationalist and multiculturalist arguments for implementing post‐arrival integration to ensure a shared public language but contends that such arguments cannot justify pre‐departure language requirements. In addition, instrumental language interests for democratic political life fall empirically short and place undue burdens on immigrants. The case of family reunification poses a unique moral problem, given the vital interest in living with one's family. The paper argues that the linguistic interests of the receiving state, in general, do not outweigh the claim to family reunification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Insults according to notions of intelligence: Perspectives from education and newsmedia.
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Rix, Jonathan
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- *
CULTURE , *MASS media , *EDUCATION , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *INTERVIEWING , *LANGUAGE & languages , *STEREOTYPES , *TERMS & phrases , *INTELLECT , *NEWSPAPERS , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Background: The terms idiot, imbecile, and moron are generally associated with notions of intelligence, having served both scientific and mundane roles across cultural‐historical contexts and in many different countries. This study seeks to explore the degree to which the use of these terms is an everyday part of our lives and to map out the meanings being attached to them. Methods: This study reports on their current usage in two arenas: within 29 academic papers published from 2016 to 2021, reporting on interviews or observations undertaken in educational contexts; and within 134 articles from four English language newspapers published in the first three months of 2021. Using a discursive and thematic approach to the analysis, it considers the degree to which these may be considered slur or taboo words, and whether they can be linked to discriminatory practices frequently experienced by groups with whom they are associated. Findings: It is evident is that people use the terms differently in different arenas. However, they see them as negative, associate them with stereotypical characteristics, are happy to apply them to others, but want to avoid having them applied to themselves. Conclusion: This study shows how widely these words are used across social contexts, and suggests that as with other historical terms for marginalized populations we need to regard them as slurs and treat them as taboo. Accessible summary: The study looked at the use of the words Idiot, Moron and Imbecile in 29 academic papers and 134 Newspaper articles.The terms were used by a many different people involved in education and in the news media.These three words are used to belittle others and people do not wish to have them used about themselves.Idiot, imbecile and moron are recognised as disapproving words, but they also act as slurs and so perhaps they ought to be forbidden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. Diadochokinetic rates in healthy young and elderly Greek‐speaking adults: The effect of types of stimuli.
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Tafiadis, Dionysios, Zarokanellou, Vasiliki, Prentza, Alexandra, Voniati, Louiza, and Ziavra, Nafsika
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SEMANTICS ,STATISTICS ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech ,AGE distribution ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,LINGUISTICS ,LANGUAGE & languages ,TASK performance ,INTERVIEWING ,QUANTITATIVE research ,REGRESSION analysis ,DYNAMICS ,SEX distribution ,SENSORY stimulation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DATA analysis software ,ADULTS ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: Diadochokinetic rates tasks are frequently used for the assessment of diadochokinesia (DKK) in young and elderly adults. However, there is scarce research on healthy elderly adults over 65 years old, and little is known about the effect of different types of stimuli (non‐words/real words) in this specific population. Furthermore, the current research supports significant language variations, highlighting the need for language‐specific norms. Aims: To investigate the effect of age, gender and type of stimuli (non‐words versus real words) in DDK rates in healthy elderly adults of over 65 years of age, and to provide normative data for the Greek language. Methods & Procedures: The participants were 791 healthy monolingual Greek‐speaking adults (531 adults, aged 20–39 years; 157 participants aged 65–74 years; and 103 participants aged over 75 years). All participants were monolingual speakers of Greek and had normal hearing acuity, which allowed them to understand and follow instructions. Participants with a medical condition, which would affect DDK rates' performance, were excluded from the study. The time‐by‐count method was used, and all participants had to repeat as accurately and fast as possible: (1) four disyllabic non‐words (/′gaba/, /′taka/, /′kata/, /′baga/); (2) four disyllabic real words (/′kapa/, /′tapa/, /ka′la/, /′paka/); and (3) two trisyllabic non‐words (/′pataka/, /′badaga/). All responses were recorded and the speech samples that did not include at least 5 s of correct repetitions were excluded from the analysis. Outcomes & Results: Age affected DDK rates significantly, with older adults achieving slower DDK rates for all speech stimuli (non‐words/real words). Gender did not have an effect on the performance of DDK rates. The type of speech stimuli affected DDK rates significantly for all age groups. Analytically, trisyllabic non‐word stimuli were articulated more slowly than disyllabic non‐word stimuli, and real words were produced faster than non‐words. A linear regression analysis revealed that only the repetition of non‐words predicted 68.4% of the performance on the repetition of trisyllabic non‐words. Conclusions & Implications: The above results complement prior research, which supports that real word stimuli yield faster performance than non‐word stimuli. Clinicians should keep in mind that age, language and type of stimuli (non‐words/real words) affect significantly the performance of DDK rates, as well as the fact that different types of stimuli tap distinct underlying levels of speech. The current research highlights the need for language‐specific norms for different populations. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: DDK rates are significantly affected by the types of stimuli and language used. Moreover, the normal ageing process decreases performance in terms of DDK rates, but scarce evidence exists for healthy elderly adults over 65 years old. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: Most studies have examined DDK rates in healthy elderly people with restricted samples and using non‐word stimuli. The current study administered different types of stimuli (non‐words/words) in a large sample of healthy elderly participants. This is also the first study to attempt to provide DDK normative data for this population in the Greek language. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: The results of this study strongly suggest that clinicians should bear in mind the significant impact age and language have on performance in terms of DDK rates, especially when normative data are not available for a certain language or age group. Furthermore, non‐word and real‐word stimuli cannot be used interchangeably since they tap into distinct underlying levels of speech, thus providing clinicians with useful information about the level of breakdown and the proper treatment plan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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26. Is sentence ambiguity comprehension affected after mild traumatic brain injury? Results suggest cognitive control is more important than diagnosis.
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Key‐DeLyria, Sarah E., Rogalski, Yvonne, Bodner, Todd, and Weichselbaum, Amanda
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ANALYSIS of variance ,COGNITION ,LANGUAGE & languages ,BRAIN injuries - Abstract
Background: Individuals with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) may experience chronic cognitive–linguistic impairments that are difficult to evaluate with existing measures. Garden path sentences are linguistically complex sentences that lead readers down a path to an incorrect interpretation. Previous research indicates many individuals, with or without mTBI, may have difficulty fully resolving the ambiguity of garden path sentences, a skill which may require cognitive control. Evidence suggests cognitive control can be impacted by mTBI. Thus, impairments in cognitive control are expected to correlate with interpreting ambiguous sentences. Aims: To examine the relationship between cognitive control and the processing of ambiguous garden path sentences in adults with mTBI. We predict individuals with mTBI will perform more poorly on ambiguous sentence tasks compared with a control group. Further, we predict that performance on this task will correlate with measures of cognitive control and working memory. Methods & Procedures: A total of 20 adults with mTBI history and 44 adults with no significant neurological history were recruited from the community. Participants completed a computerized, ambiguous sentence measure with carefully designed comprehension questions and an abbreviated neuropsychological battery of cognitive–linguistic tasks. Outcomes & Results: Participants performed similarly on sentence ambiguity resolution measures across groups with a wide range in performance. A comprehension measure aimed at identifying full ambiguity resolution correlated with cognitive control across groups. Conclusions & Implications: A link between cognitive control and linguistic ambiguity is confirmed in a comprehension measure by the current findings. mTBI history did not appear to change the nature of the relationship between cognitive control and ambiguity resolution. High individual variability on sentence and cognitive control measures across groups suggest that if an impairment were present, it would affect both types of tasks. Thus, testing cognitive communication following mTBI should specifically examine complex cognitive and linguistic processing. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: Cognitive control and ambiguous sentence processing are known to be linked, but the circumstances and individual variability associated with when cognitive control is recruited to support sentence processing are not fully understood. Very little is known about sentence processing following TBI history, despite cognitive control commonly being impaired following mild TBI. Thus, our study was necessary to explore the theoretical and clinical relationships between cognitive control and ambiguous sentence processing in individuals with mild TBI history. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study adds to our understanding of how cognitive control and ambiguous sentence processing are linked in those with mild TBI history, and similar to the few previous studies, there were no group differences in cognitive or sentence measures. The positive correlation between cognitive control on Stroop and a particular ambiguous sentence comprehension question targeting inhibitory control highlights that any relationship between abilities or assessment tasks must be very specific to tasks with overlapping requirements, such as inhibition. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: The relationship between cognitive and ambiguous sentence measures highlights the need to assess all areas of cognition and communication in those with mild TBI history without assuming that impairments in cognitive performance will relate to communication. The overlap between abilities is highly specific and must be explored on a case‐by‐case basis in those with mild TBI. Evaluation and treatment should still be individualized based on the functional communication profile of the client. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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27. Disrupting language of instruction policy at a classroom level: oracy examples from South Africa and Zambia.
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Chamberlain, Liz, Rodriguez‐Leon, Lucy, and Woodward, Clare
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LANGUAGE & languages ,CLASSROOMS ,EDUCATION policy ,CHILDREN ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Education policy in the Global South often focuses on two areas: learner‐centred education (LCE) and language of instruction (LoI). For over a decade, LCE has been promoted throughout sub‐Saharan Africa and has been referred to as a 'policy panacea'. The basic premise of LCE is that it offers learners substantial control over what and how they learn through active engagement. Pair and group work involving talk are key aspects of LCE; however, in contexts where teachers and students are not proficient in the official LoI, the efficacy of this pedagogic approach is brought into question. Drawing on vignettes based on observational data of early years and primary classroom practice in South Africa and Zambia, this paper offers a discursive exploration of how valuing oracy and legitimising multilingualism alter classroom dynamics and interactions between teachers and children. Encouraging translanguaging as a pedagogical approach enables more effective meaning‐making through talk and supports pedagogic shifts to more learner‐centred classrooms. Exploring the potential of professional development to inspire change, we critically draw out some of the observable shifts in practice, alongside the challenges, for practitioners moving to a more multilingual classroom whilst simultaneously operating within the LoI policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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28. Vibrancy and stillness in talking school discourse: examining embodied talk in a primary classroom.
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DISCOURSE ,CLASSROOMS ,CHILDREN ,LANGUAGE & languages ,BASIC education - Abstract
This paper complicates oracy by attending to moments of vibrancy and stillness in a public school classroom, where children were expected to follow particular rules that governed their bodily movement and language use. I argue that children's talk in classrooms cannot be separated from the making of meaning at the intersection of human bodies, materials and immaterial forces, including discourses of schooling and schooled literacy. To do so, I utilise teacher interviews and video‐recorded observations from a second grade classroom in the Republic of Cyprus, and analyse those drawing on an understanding of talk as embodied: as occurring through bodies, as part of and in conjunction with bodily movement, regulated and regulating, and yet not fully determining what being a child‐learner in a classroom means. I present findings from this analysis in three interrelated moves as I connect talk and silence to local classroom rules, to discourses of literacy and schooling that discipline the (talking) body, and to the contingency of embodied talk in a particular classroom event. Τhis multilayered reading provides insights into the ways in which oracy is part of an assemblage that, among others, brings together and pulls apart teachers' and children's talk, institutional discourses, and always already vibrant bodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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29. Organisms, agency and Aristotle.
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Lennox, James G.
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- *
TELEOLOGY , *BIOLOGY , *ARTISANS , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
There is a tension at the heart of Aristotle's understanding of organic activities, created by his appeals to the productive activities of craftsmen and his use of normative language to characterize the goals of such activities. In this paper I discuss two ways of interpreting Aristotle's teleology aimed at resolving this tension, and discuss a closely analogous tension at the heart of a number of contemporary defenses of teleological reasoning in biology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Primary school students' perceptions and developed artefacts and language from learning coding and computational thinking using the 3C model.
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Martin, David A., Curtis, Peter, and Redmond, Petrea
- Subjects
- *
LANGUAGE & languages , *CURRICULUM , *COMPUTERS , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERVIEWING , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *PROBLEM solving , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *JUDGMENT sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *SCHOOL children , *MEDICAL coding , *RESEARCH methodology , *ABILITY , *STUDENT attitudes , *LEARNING strategies , *DATA analysis software , *TRAINING - Abstract
Background: A resurgence in teaching coding in primary school classrooms has led to a pedagogical swing towards using physical computing and coding to develop students' use of algorithms, computational thinking, and problem‐solving skills. Two obstacles impede the optimal development of these objectives: the availability of a suitable pedagogy and an instructional sequencing model for primary school teachers to effectively present coding and computational thinking concepts and skills to students in alignment with their developmental stage. Objective: This study aims to address both obstacles by introducing the 3C Model, a newly developed instructional sequence grounded in established pedagogies and designed to effectively teach coding and computational thinking skills to primary school students based on their developmental stage. Methods: The qualitative study employed two data sources to triangulate findings, using: (1) semi‐structured interviews and thematic analysis to investigate 11 primary school students' perceptions of their learning experiences with the 3C Model, and (2) researcher observations along with reflections of the students' developed and demonstrated learning through the method of knowing‐in‐action, reflection‐in‐action, and reflection‐on‐action. Results and Conclusions: The findings of this study fill a gap in the existing literature by demonstrating that the pedagogical and sequential approach embedded in the 3C Model not only enhanced students' engagement levels but also resulted in improved curriculum learning outcomes. The 3C Model provides teachers with a coherent and age‐appropriate instructional structure. It uses physical computing devices and digital coding platforms to introduce coding concepts, furthering the development of computational thinking skills in primary school students beyond mere procedural and rote learning. Implications: The study holds important implications for practical applications, as it addresses an absence in the literature of an established pedagogy and instructional sequencing model for effectively teaching coding and computational thinking concepts and skills to primary school students. Drawing on established pedagogical and developmental learning theories, the 3C Model provides primary school teachers with an engaging, age‐appropriate instructional method that avoids decontextualised teaching and surface‐based learning. Instead, it encourages collaborative student work and contextualised learning, steering away from isolated and generic approaches. Lay Description: What is currently known about this topic: Teaching coding and computational thinking concepts and skills is complex due to their abstract nature.Teaching resources such as work samples, curriculum connections and tools are available to primary school teachers.There is no consensus on the most effective methods to teach these abstract concepts and skills.Primary school teachers default to applying general teaching strategies due to the lack of an age‐appropriate, specific activity sequencing model to use during coding instruction. What does this paper add: The study fills the existing gap by presenting a newly conceptualised instructional model, which considers the students' developmental stage of learning and pedagogical best practices.The study trialled the 3C Model with primary school students in a classroom setting.The study found that employing the pedagogical approach of the 3C Model increased students' engagement levels and resulted in enhanced curriculum learning outcomes. Implications for practitioners: Without an age‐appropriate instructional sequencing model students may not be grasping the underlying concepts.Simply focusing on the code without emphasising concepts such as decomposition and algorithmic thinking will result in shallow learning.Key considerations in using the 3C Model are ensuring that conceptual development occurs using physical computing devices and language students are familiar with prior to introducing coding language and its symbolic representations.Primary school teachers should consider incorporating physical interactive digital devices, physical movement, staged language development and subsequent coding procedures within the context of an engaging and authentic problem. This approach enables students to effectively grasp and represent coding and computational thinking concepts and skills, surpassing mere procedural and rote learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Enacting control with student dashboards: The role of motivation.
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Knoop‐van Campen, Carolien A. N., van der Graaf, Joep, Horvers, Anne, Kooi, Rianne, Dijkstra, Rick, and Molenaar, Inge
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- *
LANGUAGE & languages , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *MATHEMATICS , *STATISTICAL significance , *RESEARCH funding , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *SCHOOL children , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *LEARNING strategies , *VOCABULARY , *DATA analysis software , *INFORMATION display systems , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling - Abstract
Background: Even though monitoring and control enactment are key aspects of self‐regulated learning (SRL), Adaptive learning technologies (ALTs) may reduce the need for learners to monitor and control their learning. Personalized dashboards are effective in supporting learners' monitoring and can potentially support control behaviour. Allowing learners to enact control over their learning process, seems to hold potential for increasing their motivation. Objectives: Therefore, this study's aim was to investigate the relation between control enactment and motivation. We examined how learners enacted control while learning with an ALT with personalized dashboards and examined the relation between learners' enactment of control and their motivation. Methods: Seventy‐eight primary school learners (Grade 5) participated. During the lesson, learners worked on mathematics in the ALT and concurrently were shown personalized visualizations that supported monitoring and enacting control over their learning process. Learners could enact control to change problems' difficulty to easy, medium, or hard. Motivation was measured before and after learning. Results: The SEM analyses showed that how learners enacted control was related to their motivation. Choosing difficult problems was related to more enjoyment and competence while choosing easy problems related to more pressure and tension. Learners who complied with the suggested difficulty level experienced less choice, but also less pressure/tension and more enjoyment and competence. Conclusions: These results provide avenues to account for broader learner characteristics like SRL and motivation to optimize learning. This way, hybrid systems in which control enactment is a shared responsibility of the system and learner, can be improved to support SRL development. Lay Description: What is currently known: Monitor and control enactment are key aspects of self‐regulated learning (SRL).Adaptive learning technologies may reduce the need for learners to monitor and control their learning.Personalized dashboards support learners' monitoring behaviour and can potentially also support control enactment.Enactment of control could positively affect learners' motivation. What does this paper add: There is a large variation in how learners enact control and whether they comply with the scaffold.Learners who chose more difficult problems experienced more enjoyment, while learners choosing easy problems, experienced more pressure.Learners complied with the scaffold, experienced less choice, but also less pressure and more enjoyment.This study provides avenues to account for broader learner characteristics like SRL and motivation to optimize learning. Practical implications: Support control enactment by actively involve learners in choice during the learning process.Offer monitor and enactment in conjunction, as learners can only make well‐founded choices if they can monitor their learning process.Intrinsically and extrinsically motivated learners showed different choice patterns and learning experience.It is important to have an understanding and monitoring of learners' motivation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Investigating L2 writers' uses of machine translation and other online tools.
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Vinall, Kimberly, Wen, Wen, and Hellmich, Emily A.
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LANGUAGE & languages ,TECHNOLOGY ,WRITING processes ,TRANSLATIONS ,MACHINE translating - Abstract
New technologies have had a substantial impact on L2 learners' writing processes. Given the continuous nature of technological evolution, more work is needed to document L2 writers' learner‐initiated technology use, particularly their use of machine translation (MT) tools. This need is further solidified by recent calls for new pedagogical approaches to better prepare learners to use MT critically. The current study uses screen recordings, retrospective recall, and interviews to document what online tools L2 writers' use, how they use them, and what factors influence this use. Findings reveal that participants overwhelmingly rely on MT tools while writing. Moreover, they engage in complex actions with MT tools, which are influenced by language knowledge, beliefs about online tools, their own perceived roles in the writing process, and classroom policies. The paper ends with a consideration of the struggles that emerge to consider their pedagogical implications for supporting critical online tool use. The Challenge: How do L2 writers use online tools? Does it matter? To support L2 writers' critical and meaningful use of online tools, particularly the increasingly‐ubiquitous machine translation tools, we need to understand better how learners are using them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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33. Reason, language, history: Pragmatism's contested promise.
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PRAGMATISM ,RATIONAL-legal authority ,NATURALISM ,NATURALISTS ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Currently, one of the most important points of contention in defining contemporary pragmatistm arises from the challenge posed to pragmatism's traditional naturalist orientation by Robert Brandom's rationalist pragmatism. This paper compares the two positions, suggesting that the argument between them revolves around the role of language (rather than experience, as is frequently asserted)—more specifically, around the role of systematicity and formal analysis in our conceptions of rational inquiry and discourse. The paper suggests that Brandom's approach may be more suited to a retrospective integration and assessment of the rational learning processes, as opposed to the anticipation of their prospective dimension usually emphasized by the naturalist pragmatism; moreover, that it seems most appropriate in learning contexts that depend on the continued transmission of epistemic authority open to rational correction, and may not be suited for the conceptualization of the less formally structured domains of discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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34. Home and expatriate nurses' perceptions of job satisfaction: Qualitative findings.
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Almansour, Husam, Gobbi, Mary, and Prichard, Jane
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HOME nursing ,DISMISSAL of employees ,HOSPITALS ,LABOR mobility ,NURSING ,EMPLOYMENT in foreign countries ,NURSES' attitudes ,NOMADS ,HEALTH services administration ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,PARENT-child separation ,LANGUAGE & languages ,CULTURAL pluralism ,LEADERS ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,QUALITATIVE research ,LABOR supply ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,JOB satisfaction ,COMMUNICATION ,WAGES ,NURSES ,ETHNIC groups ,PROFESSIONALISM ,POLICY sciences ,EMPLOYEE retention - Abstract
Aim: This paper is part of a larger doctoral study that investigated the impact of nationality on the job satisfaction of nurses and their intentions to leave Saudi Arabian government hospitals. The paper aims to gain an understanding of the impact of expatriate status on nurses' perceptions, by comparing the factors that influence job satisfaction among Saudi nurses to those that affect nurses recruited from other countries. Background: Job satisfaction is a known predictor of nurse retention. Although there is a broad understanding of the factors that affect job satisfaction, little is known about how these vary between home and expatriate nurses working in countries which rely on a multicultural migrant workforce. Methods: A descriptive qualitative approach was taken, in which 26 semi‐structured interviews were conducted with nurses selected from different nationalities, all of whom were working in Saudi Arabian hospitals. Eight participants were Saudi Arabian, six Filipino, four Indian, four South African, two Jordanian and two Malaysian. Findings: Five themes were identified that differentiated the perceptions of expatriates regarding their job satisfaction from those of the home nurses: separation from family, language and communication, fairness of remuneration, moving into the future and professionalism. Conclusion: Focusing on the enhancement of job satisfaction experienced by expatriate nurses can result in a healthier work environment and greater retention of these nurses. Implications for nursing and nursing policy: To enhance nurse retention, policy makers in countries with migrant nurses should address their socio‐economic needs. This includes providing both greater access to their dependent family members, and language lessons and cultural orientation to reduce linguistic and cultural challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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35. Rules, practices, and assessment of linguistic behaviour.
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Kaluziński, Bartosz
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LINGUISTICS ,SOCIAL action ,RULES ,LANGUAGE & languages ,DESIRE - Abstract
In this paper, I focus on the idea that language is a rule‐constituted and rule‐governed practice. This notion has been criticised recently. It has been claimed that, even if linguistic meaning is determined by rules, these rules are not genuinely normative because they do not govern actions within the practice by themselves. It has been emphasised that one needs to consent (e.g., has relevant intention or desire) to be a part of that practice. First, I distinguish between two issues: (1) How do rules come to life? (and the answer to that question is by enactment or communal acceptance), and (2) does being assessed by the standards set by the rules require some form of consent for one's actions to be evaluated by these standards? Then, I demonstrate how, by introducing the notion of "default normativity", one can defend the idea that there are normative practices that are constituted and governed by rules and that language is one of them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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36. Influence of capitalisation and presence of an article in noun phrase recognition in German: Evidence from eye‐tracking.
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Vogelzang, Margreet, Fuhrhop, Nanna, Mundhenk, Tobias, and Ruigendijk, Esther
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CAPITALISM ,NOUN phrases (Grammar) ,EYE tracking ,LANGUAGE & languages ,SIGNALING (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: German is exceptional in its use of noun capitalisation. It has been suggested that sentence‐internal capitalisation as in German may benefit processing by specifically marking a noun and thus a noun phrase (NP). However, other cues, such as a determiner, can also indicate an NP. The influence of capitalisation on processing may thus be context‐dependent, that is, dependent on other cues. Precisely this context dependency is investigated in the current study: Is there an effect of capitalisation on reading and is this affected by the presence of other cues such as a determiner (specifically, an article)? Methods: We ran an eye‐tracking study with 30 German‐speaking adults, measuring fixations during sentence reading. Critical NPs either contained correctly capitalised nouns or not and were presented either with or without a determiner. Results: The results show that both the presence of capitalisation on the noun and the presence of a determiner led to faster reading. When no determiner was present to signal the NP, the presence of noun capitalisation aided reading most. Conclusions: From these results, we conclude that the influence of capitalisation is indeed context dependent: Capitalisation aids processing most when no other cue is present. Thus, different cues play a role in NP recognition. Based on these findings, we argue that noun capitalisation should not be studied in isolation. We argue that a better understanding of capitalisation as a reading aid is relevant for teaching reading strategies. Highlights: What is already known about this topicGerman has the quite exceptional characteristic of sentence‐internal capitalisation of all nouns.The function of sentence‐internal capitalisation is controversial. What this paper addsThis study experimentally shows that capitalisation and presence of an article conspire in NP recognition in German.We find that capitalisation aids processing. This effect is strongest when no determiner is present. Implications for theory, policy or practiceWe argue that possible reading aids for NP recognition (like capitalisation, articles and adjectives) should not be studied in isolation.Investigations of these aids and how they may interact should also be done for other languages.A better understanding of capitalisation as a reading aid is relevant for teaching reading strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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37. Patterns of reading behaviour in digital hypertext environments.
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Hahnel, Carolin, Ramalingam, Dara, Kroehne, Ulf, and Goldhammer, Frank
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HYPERTEXT systems ,LANGUAGE & languages ,POPULATION geography ,MATHEMATICS ,SOCIAL classes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,READING ,HIGH school students ,SCIENCE - Abstract
Background: Computer‐based assessment allows for the monitoring of reader behaviour. The identification of patterns in this behaviour can provide insights that may be useful in informing educational interventions. Objectives: Our study aims to explore what different patterns of reading activity exist, and investigates their interpretation and consistency across different task sets (units), countries, and languages. Three patterns were expected: on‐task, exploring and disengaged. Methods: Using log data from the PISA 2012 digital reading assessment (9226 students from seven countries), we conducted hierarchical cluster analyses with typical process indicators of digital reading assessments. We identified different patterns and explored whether they remained consistent across different units. To validate the interpretation of the identified patterns, we examined their relationship to performance and student characteristics (gender, socio‐economic status, print reading skills). Results and Conclusions: The results indicate a small number of transnational clusters, with unit‐specific differences. Cluster interpretation is supported by associations with student characteristics—for example, students with low print reading skills were more likely to show a disengaged pattern than proficient readers. Exploring behaviour tended to be exhibited only once across the three units: It occurred in the first unit for proficient readers and in later units for less skilled readers. Major Takeaways: Behavioural patterns can be identified in digital reading tasks that may prove useful for educational monitoring and intervention. Although task situations are designed to evoke certain behaviours, the interpretation of observed behavioural patterns requires validation based on task requirements, assessment context and relationships to other available information. Lay Description: What is already known about the subject matter?: Students differ in how they read, comprehend and use digital information.Indicators from process data provide insight about how students engage with digital reading tasks. What does this paper add to the subject matter?: Based on multiple process indicators, a small number of clusters indicating different behavioural activity can be distinguished.These clusters can be described as on‐task, passive, hasty, exploring, disengaged, persistent and lost interest.A meaningful interpretation of the clusters must consider the requirements of the underlying tasks. Implications for practice and/or policy: Knowledge of how students engage with digital resources may provide useful feedback for teachers to guide students' learning or intervene when they struggle.Educational monitoring: The high comparability of country‐specific results suggests an invariant set of solution strategies in the digital reading assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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38. Stone tools, predictive processing and the evolution of language.
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Pain, Ross
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STONE implements ,STONE Age ,INFORMATION processing ,LANGUAGE & languages ,STOUT - Abstract
Recent work by Stout and colleagues indicates that the neural correlates of language and Early Stone Age toolmaking overlap significantly. The aim of this paper is to add computational detail to their findings. I use an error minimisation model to outline where the information processing overlap between toolmaking and language lies. I argue that the Early Stone Age signals the emergence of complex structured representations. I then highlight a feature of my account: It allows us to understand the early evolution of syntax in terms of an increase in the number and complexity of models in a cognitive system, rather than the development of new types of processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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39. A pilot study of AID‐COMp: An innovative speech–language intervention for patients with early‐stage major neurocognitive disorder.
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Chesneau, Sophie, Mekary, Michelle, Chayer, Nadége, and Le Dorze, Guylaine
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COGNITION disorders ,MEMORY ,PILOT projects ,SEMANTICS ,WELL-being ,SPEECH therapy ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,LANGUAGE & languages ,QUANTITATIVE research ,QUALITATIVE research ,T-test (Statistics) ,COMMUNICATION devices for people with disabilities - Abstract
Background: Major neurocognitive disorder (MND) alters cognition, memory and language, and consequently affects communication. Speech–language therapy (SLT) may alleviate communication difficulties. Aims: This pilot study explored the effects of intensive SLT emphasizing memory, language, and discourse impairment and complementary communication strategies, called Aid for Communication—For Persons Who Live with MND (AID‐COMp). Methods & Procedures: We employed a mixed design using quantitative and qualitative methods with four dyads, including a person living with MND (PwMND) and a family carer. The design included a control period, and we tested participants before (T1) and after 2 months without therapy (T2). AID‐COMp was then provided intensively three times per week for 10 sessions and participants were tested again (T3). Participants were also involved in an individual qualitative interview after therapy ended, probing their experience and possible effects on their lives. AID‐COMp included: (1) spaced retrieval to teach the use of a memory book; (2) semantic and phonological therapy for lexical access; (3) discourse treatment based on the analysis of the macrostructure and microstructure of stories in pictures and texts; and (4) PACE therapy for generalization. Carers were not included in treatment, did not attend sessions and were only involved in the evaluations. Measures included language, communication, cognitive and well‐being tests. Paired t‐tests (one‐tailed) compared scores for the control period, that is, T1 versus T2. We compared scores after therapy (T3) with those at T2. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed qualitatively. Outcomes & Results: For the control period, only text comprehension scores significantly decreased in PwMND. After therapy, improvements occurred on the Boston Naming Test (BNT), the Mini‐Mental State Exam (MMSE) and the well‐being measure for the PwMND. Carer scores were unchanged after therapy except for their perception of the PwMND's communication which improved. Qualitative findings comprised three themes: (1) understanding therapy; (2) recovering abilities and relationships; and (3) naming further needs. Conclusions & Implications: We hypothesize that AID‐COMp addressed the underlying impairments associated with MND and provided various tools to PwMND for composing effectively with them. Indeed, AID‐COMp appears to provoke some degree of improvement of language skills, cognition and emotional well‐being. These improvements may lead to more confidence in conversation and the recovery of relationships between the PwMND and their entourage. It is also possible that improvements acted positively on one another. These preliminary findings warrant further controlled studies with more participants, including a qualitative exploration of participant experiences. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: MND affects cognition and communication, which are crucial to a good relationship between a carer and a person with MND. Interventions involving only PwMND have been shown to be effective, but do not address all the communication impairments in the mild stage of MND. These interventions may require many therapy sessions. Generally, SLT interventions do not examine the potential effects of an intervention on carers. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: AID‐COMp, an intensive intervention of 10 sessions over 1 month, was provided to people living with MND in the community. It included training the person with MND in using a memory notebook combined with semantic and phonological therapy, a new discourse therapy and PACE therapy, addressing several communication deficits. After a control period of 2 months without intervention and a 1‐month intensive intervention, the results showed significant improvement in naming, cognition and communication, and PwMND well‐being. Moreover, the carers witnessed the impacts of therapy in their everyday life interactions with the PwMND. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work: AID‐COMp can provide communication support for PwMND that has further benefits reported by both PwMND and carers. We described AID‐COMp in detail to inspire clinicians in providing SLT for unserved PwMND. Future research studies should use controlled designs, more participants and a qualitative component. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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40. A systematic review of speech, language and communication interventions for children with Down syndrome from 0 to 6 years.
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Seager, Emily, Sampson, Sarah, Sin, Jacqueline, Pagnamenta, Emma, and Stojanovik, Vesna
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PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,DOWN syndrome ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LANGUAGE & languages ,COMMUNICATION ,MEDLINE ,SPEECH ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) - Abstract
Background: Speech and language acquisition can be a challenge for young children with Down syndrome (DS), and while early intervention is important, we do not know what early interventions exist and how effective they may be. Aims: To systematically review existing early speech, language and communication interventions for young children with DS from birth up to 6 years, and to investigate their effectiveness in improving speech, language and communication outcomes in children with DS. Other outcomes are changes in parental behaviour and their responsiveness Methods & Procedures: We conducted a systematic search of relevant electronic databases to identify early intervention studies targeting speech, language and communication outcomes in children with DS published up to May 2020. A total of 11 studies that met the inclusion criteria were synthesized and appraised for quality using the PEDro‐P scale. There were a total of 242 children. We identified three types of intervention: communication training and responsive teaching, early stimulation programme, and dialectic–didactic approach. Main contribution: The findings from nine out of the 11 studies reported positive outcomes for children's language and communication up to 18 months following the intervention. All nine studies reported interventions that were co‐delivered by parents and clinicians. However, there was also a de‐accelerated growth in requesting behaviours in the intervention group reported by one study as well as a case of no improvement for the intervention group. Three studies provided some evidence of improvements to parent outcomes, such as increased parental language input and increased responsiveness. However, there was a moderate to high risk of bias for all studies included. Conclusions: The findings from this review suggest that interventions that have high dosage, focus on language and communication training within a naturalistic setting, and are co‐delivered by parents and clinicians/researchers may have the potential to provide positive outcomes for children with DS between 0 and 6 years of age. Due to the limited number of studies, limited heterogeneous data and the moderate to high risk of bias across studies, there is an urgent need for higher quality intervention studies in the field to build the evidence base. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Speech and language acquisition is usually delayed in children with DS, yet there are currently no standard interventions for children under 6. A number of research‐based interventions exist in the literature, yet it is unknown how effective these are. What this study adds to existing knowledge: This is the first systematic review that specifically and exclusively focuses on parent‐ and non‐parent‐mediated speech, language and communication interventions for children with DS between 0 and 6 years of age. It complements three existing recent reviews, each of which has a slightly different focus. The previously published reviews have covered only parent‐mediated interventions, excluding interventions not mediated by parents, have reviewed interventions including children and adults, without any mention of what early interventions may be like or how effective these may be for young children with DS, have not always assessed risk of bias or have focused specifically on language interventions excluding those focusing on speech articulation or pre‐linguistic skills. The findings from the current review suggest that interventions that have high dosage focus on language and communication training within a naturalistic setting and are co‐delivered by parents and clinicians/researchers may have the potential to provide positive outcomes for children with Diwn syndrome from 0 to 6. We acknowledge that the current evidence base comes from studies with moderate to high risk of bias, hence our conclusions are not definitive. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Speech and language therapists will have synthesized information and a quick reference point on what type of interventions exist for children with DS under the age of 6, and evidence of which intervention approaches may be promising in terms of providing positive outcomes. However, it is acknowledged that, due to the limited number of studies and the moderate to high risk of bias inherent in the evidence, there is an urgent need for higher quality intervention studies in the field to build the evidence base. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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41. You may point, but do not touch: Impact of gesture‐types and cognition on language in typical and atypical development.
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Ramos‐Cabo, Sara, Acha, Joana, Vulchanov, Valentin, and Vulchanova, Mila
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AUTISM risk factors ,CHILD development ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,COGNITION ,LANGUAGE & languages ,REGRESSION analysis ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,HAND ,FACTOR analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BODY language ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Background: Evidence shows that the relation with the referent (object manipulation, contact/no contact pointing) and the different hand features (index finger/open palm) when pointing indicate different levels of cognitive and linguistic attainment in typical development (TD). This evidences the close link between pointing, cognition and language in TD, but this relation is understudied in autism. Moreover, the longitudinal pathway these abilities follow remains unexplored and it is unclear what specific role (predictor or mediator) pointing and cognition have in both typical and atypical language development. Aims: The first aim was to investigate whether pointing hand features (index finger/open palm) and relation with the referent (manipulation, contact and no contact pointing) similarly predict language in children with and without autism. The second aim was to explore whether cognition mediates the longitudinal relationship between pointing and language development. Methods & Procedures: Sixteen children with autism, 13 children at high risk (HR) for autism and 18 TD children participated in an interactive gesture‐elicitation task and were tested on standardised cognitive and expressive language batteries in a longitudinal design. A two‐step analysis consisted of a stepwise linear regression and mediation analyses. First, the linear regression identified which hand features and types of relation with the referent predicted expressive language in all groups. Second, three mediation analyses (one per group) assessed the predictor/mediator role of the variables that met significance in the regression analysis. Outcomes & Results: Both cognition and index finger pointing were direct longitudinal predictors of further expressive language skills in the autism group. In TD and HR groups this relation was mediated by age. Conclusions & Implications: Findings highlight the role of age in communicative development, but suggest a key role of cognition and index finger use in the longitudinal relationship between pointing gestures and expressive language development in children with autism. This has important clinical implications and supports the view that index finger pointing production might be a useful tool in the intervention for communicative and language abilities in autism. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: There is evidence that no contact pointing is associated with complex socio‐cognitive abilities that underpin communication in TD. Similarly, studies in TD show that index finger pointing is closely linked with language acquisition. However, it is unclear whether these associations are present in autism. In addition, the mediating (or predictive) role of cognition in the pointing–language relation has not yet been explored neither in typical nor in atypical development. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This paper shows that index finger pointing and cognition are direct longitudinal predictors of expressive language in the autism group. In the other groups this relation is mediated by age. This suggests that there is a window of opportunity for pointing to predict expressive language whereas the predictive value of cognition expands in development. Based on this, children with autism would share the same language predictors as TD children, but with delays. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: This study reveals that index finger, age and cognition reliably predict spoken language in autism, which may indicate that early prelinguistic intervention based on pointing production and the improvement of cognitive skills might have a positive impact on spoken language in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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42. Integrated interdisciplinary workflows for research on historical newspapers: Perspectives from humanities scholars, computer scientists, and librarians.
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Oberbichler, Sarah, Boroş, Emanuela, Doucet, Antoine, Marjanen, Jani, Pfanzelter, Eva, Rautiainen, Juha, Toivonen, Hannu, and Tolonen, Mikko
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OCCUPATIONAL roles ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,DIGITAL technology ,INFORMATION resources management ,LANGUAGE & languages ,WORKFLOW ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,NEWSPAPERS ,INFORMATION science ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,ACCESS to information ,INFORMATION retrieval ,HUMANITIES ,LIBRARIANS ,DATA analysis - Abstract
This article considers the interdisciplinary opportunities and challenges of working with digital cultural heritage, such as digitized historical newspapers, and proposes an integrated digital hermeneutics workflow to combine purely disciplinary research approaches from computer science, humanities, and library work. Common interests and motivations of the above‐mentioned disciplines have resulted in interdisciplinary projects and collaborations such as the NewsEye project, which is working on novel solutions on how digital heritage data is (re)searched, accessed, used, and analyzed. We argue that collaborations of different disciplines can benefit from a good understanding of the workflows and traditions of each of the disciplines involved but must find integrated approaches to successfully exploit the full potential of digitized sources. The paper is furthermore providing an insight into digital tools, methods, and hermeneutics in action, showing that integrated interdisciplinary research needs to build something in between the disciplines while respecting and understanding each other's expertise and expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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43. The utility of LENA as an indicator of developmental outcomes for young children with autism.
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Sulek, Rhylee, Smith, Jodie, Bent, Catherine Anne, Hudry, Kristelle, Trembath, David, Vivanti, Giacomo, and Dissanayake, Cheryl
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RESEARCH ,CHILD development ,SPEECH evaluation ,LANGUAGE & languages ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,SEVERITY of illness index ,AUTISM ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STATISTICAL correlation ,PARENTS - Abstract
Background: There is growing understanding of the potential benefits of a multi‐method approach to accurately capture language skills of children on the autism spectrum. Tools such as Language ENvironment Analysis (LENA) provide an efficient means of capturing and analysing early child vocalizations (CVs) and the language learning environment. While developed to capture whole‐day recordings of child language in naturalistic settings, there is potential utility in capturing, but little knowledge about, primary LENA metrics—including CVs and conversational turns (CTs)—and novel metrics, such as vocalization ratios (VRs), sampled in clinical practice settings where children are often seen. Moreover, recent research indicates that the novel VR may offer a broad indicator of children's developmental level, beyond just their language abilities, a hypothesis yet to be investigated in a large sample of children for whom the LENA was designed (i.e., pre‐schoolers). Aims: To explore the extent to which primary and novel LENA metrics collected during brief one‐to‐one clinical interaction was a useful indicator of developmental outcomes for children on the autism spectrum. Methods & Procedures: Participants were recruited as part of an on‐going research programme evaluating early intervention outcomes (n = 99; age 14–47 months). Language samples were collected at intake (T1) using the wearable LENA Digital Language Processors during a one‐to‐one, play‐based assessment with a clinician. Direct (Mullen Scales of Early Learning—MSEL) and parent‐report (Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales—VABS) measures of verbal and non‐verbal skills were also collected at intake (T1) and again at exit (T2), approximately 12 months later. Outcomes & Results: Few correlations were observed between child measures and CVs, a primary LENA metric. The novel VR metric was associated with concurrent direct assessment (MSEL) (and to a lesser extent parent report; VABS) measures of verbal and non‐verbal skills, with moderate positive correlations found between VRs and all directly assessed subscale scores. However, VRs did not uniquely contribute to the prediction of child outcomes when baseline skills were also considered. Conclusions & Implications: The novel VR may provide an insight into autistic children's overall development in addition to their language ability, suggesting that even when collected in a short recording format, LENA might be a useful component of a multi‐method assessment approach. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: To accurately capture language skills of children on the autism spectrum, multi‐method approaches, including natural language sampling, are recommended. Tools such as LENA provide an efficient means of capturing and analysing naturalistic child language and the language learning environment. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study demonstrates the potential benefits, and limitations, of using LENA to augment assessment of young children on the autism spectrum. Specifically, LENA provides a complementary, and low burden, method for capturing child language samples. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Novel metrics, such as the VR, collected during brief clinical interactions might be a useful component of a multi‐method assessment approach for children on the autism spectrum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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44. The role of colour coding of educational materials when studying grammatical categories of the Ukrainian language by foreign students.
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Zavaruieva, Inna, Bondarenko, Larysa, and Fedko, Olha
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UKRAINIAN language ,GRAMMATICAL categories ,FOREIGN students ,LANGUAGE & languages ,SIGNS & symbols - Abstract
The paper considers the practical experience of creating educational visual materials on the Ukrainian language as a foreign language using innovative technologies, namely, the specifics of the role and place of colour and colour symbols as a code sign during the assimilation of new educational information. This study employed the following theoretical methods—analysis, systematisation and generalisation of modern research; empirical methods—experimental work; statistical methods—qualitative and quantitative processing of the results of empirical research; systematisation and correlation of the results of empirical research in accordance with the values of the case paradigm of the Ukrainian language. It was established that colour can affect not only a person's emotions and behaviour, but also cognitive processes, thinking and memory. Upon recollecting information, a person reproduces events and focuses on everything associated with them. Within the framework of this study, the authors have identified the role of the influence of colour on the activation and mobilisation of students' attention and memory, found ways to learn grammatical categories of the Ukrainian language using a generalising colour table. The authors proved that studying grammatical categories of the Ukrainian language using the colour coding method improves awareness and reproduction of educational information. Context and implicationsRationale for this studyThe process of Eurointegration in Ukraine has an impact on all spheres of life, in particular on the educational system, where significant changes related to the optimisation of technologies, forms and means of teaching, improving the ways of motivating the assimilation of the necessary information are taking place. The quality of international students teaching and its effectiveness need to be improved. The solution to the problem of the effectiveness of the educational materials lies in the harmonious combination of structured content and cognitively oriented design. This paper considers the practical experience of creating educational materials on the Ukrainian language as a foreign language using innovative technologies such as the specifics of the role and place of colour and colour symbols as a code sign in the assimilation of new educational information.Why the new findings matterIn the study, it was found that colour can affect cognitive processes, thinking and memory of a person, and the role of the colour influence on the activation and mobilisation of students' attention and memory was revealed. The results of the research prove that the study of grammatical categories of the Ukrainian language using the colour coding method improves the comprehension and reproduction of teaching information.Implications for educational researchers and policymakersThe grammatical table created by the authors contains the most difficult grammatical material for assimilation; it takes into account the basic psychological regularities of visual perception of information, colour influence on the human subconscious and is based on the principle of material accessibility, which manifests itself in the presence of symbols and words that are understandable for the speakers of different languages. Using the developed table, the conjugation of nouns, as well as adjectives and endings of pronouns and ordinal numbers can be studied. Educators should take into account that professional selection of colours significantly increases cognitive and motivational characteristics and decreases the level of negative psychoemotional states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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45. I remembered the chorm! Word learning abilities of children with and without phonological impairment.
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Hearnshaw, Stephanie, Baker, Elise, Pomper, Ron, McGregor, Karla K., Edwards, Jan, and Munro, Natalie
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ARTICULATION disorders , *LANGUAGE & languages , *SOCIAL media , *AUDIOVISUAL materials , *PARENTS , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *T-test (Statistics) , *TASK performance , *COMPUTER software , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *LEARNING , *MANN Whitney U Test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SPEECH evaluation , *STORYTELLING , *STATISTICS , *VOCABULARY , *SPEECH perception , *PHONETICS , *CLINICS , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *GROUP process , *SOCIAL classes , *INTER-observer reliability , *EVALUATION , *CHILDREN ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: Children with phonological impairment present with pattern‐based errors in their speech production. While some children have difficulties with speech perception and/or the establishment of robust underlying phonological representations, the nature of phonological impairment in children is still not well understood. Given that phonological and lexical development are closely linked, one way to better understand the nature of the problem in phonological impairment is to examine word learning abilities in children. Aims: To examine word learning and its relationship with speech perception, speech production and vocabulary knowledge in children aged 4–5 years. There were two variables of interest: speech production abilities ranging from phonological impairment to typical speech; and vocabulary abilities ranging from typical to above average ('lexically precocious'). Methods & Procedures: Participants were 49 Australian‐English‐speaking children aged 48–69 months. Children were each taught four novel non‐words (out of a selection of eight) through stories, and word learning was assessed at 1 week post‐initial exposure. Word learning was assessed using two measures: confrontation naming and story retell naming. Data were analysed by group using independent‐samples t‐tests and Mann–Whitney U‐tests, and continuously using multiple linear regression. Outcomes & Results: There was no significant difference in word learning ability of children with and without phonological impairment, but regardless of speech group, children with above average vocabulary had significantly better word learning abilities than children with average vocabulary. In multiple linear regression, vocabulary was the only significant predictor of variance in word learning ability. Conclusions & Implications: Children with phonological impairment can be lexically precocious and learn new words like their peers without phonological impairment. Contrary to expectations, vocabulary knowledge rather than expressive phonological ability explained variance in measures of word learning. These findings question an assumption that children with phonological impairment have underspecified phonological representations. They also highlight the heterogeneity among children with phonological impairment and the need to better understand the nature of their difficulty learning the phonological system of the ambient language. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: There is limited research examining the word learning abilities of children with phonological impairment. Most previous research focuses on word properties such as phonotactic probability and neighbourhood density. Within the existing literature there are different reports and conclusions regarding the word learning abilities of children with phonological impairment and whether their word learning differs from that of children with typically developing speech. What this study adds to existing knowledge: This study found that vocabulary was the strongest predictor of word learning across children with and without phonological impairment. There was no significant difference in word learning ability between children with and without phonological impairment. However, children with lexically precocious vocabulary abilities were significantly better at word learning than children with average vocabulary abilities. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Findings from this study support the importance of assessing and considering measures of word learning—including vocabulary—when working with children with phonological impairment. This study indicates that it is possible to use stories coupled with measures of confrontation naming and story retell to gain deeper insight into children's word learning abilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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46. Raising the Roof: Situating Verbs in Symbolic and Embodied Language Processing.
- Author
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Hollander, John and Olney, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
VERBS , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *AGRAMMATISM , *LANGUAGE & languages , *TEST validity - Abstract
Recent investigations on how people derive meaning from language have focused on task-dependent shifts between two cognitive systems. The symbolic (amodal) system represents meaning as the statistical relationships between words. The embodied (modal) system represents meaning through neurocognitive simulation of perceptual or sensorimotor systems associated with a word's referent. A primary finding of literature in this field is that the embodied system is only dominant when a task necessitates it, but in certain paradigms, this has only been demonstrated using nouns and adjectives. The purpose of this paper is to study whether similar effects hold with verbs. Experiment 1 evaluated a novel task in which participants rated a selection of verbs on their implied vertical movement. Ratings correlated well with distributional semantic models, establishing convergent validity, though some variance was unexplained by language statistics alone. Experiment 2 replicated previous noun-based location-cue congruency experimental paradigms with verbs and showed that the ratings obtained in Experiment 1 predicted reaction times more strongly than language statistics. Experiment 3 modified the location-cue paradigm by adding movement to create an animated, temporally decoupled, movement-verb judgment task designed to examine the relative influence of symbolic and embodied processing for verbs. Results were generally consistent with linguistic shortcut hypotheses of symbolic-embodied integrated language processing; location-cue congruence elicited processing facilitation in some conditions, and perceptual information accounted for reaction times and accuracy better than language statistics alone. These studies demonstrate novel ways in which embodied and linguistic information can be examined while using verbs as stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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47. Why bounded rationality (in epistemology)?
- Author
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Thorstad, David
- Subjects
- *
REASON , *THEORY of knowledge , *LANGUAGE & languages , *COGNITIVE science , *ACADEMIC art - Abstract
Bounded rationality gets a bad rap in epistemology. It is argued that theories of bounded rationality are overly context‐sensitive; conventionalist; or dependent on ordinary language (Carr, 2022; Pasnau, 2013). In this paper, I have three aims. The first is to set out and motivate an approach to bounded rationality in epistemology inspired by traditional theories of bounded rationality in cognitive science. My second aim is to show how this approach can answer recent challenges raised for theories of bounded rationality. My third aim is to clarify the role of rational ideals in bounded rationality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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48. Towards a critical translanguaging biliteracy pedagogy: the 'aha moment' stories of two Mandarin Chinese teachers in Canada.
- Author
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Jin, Jing and Liu, Yina
- Subjects
CHINESE teachers' writings ,TEACHERS ,ONLINE education ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Learning Mandarin Chinese as a heritage or additional language at Chinese complementary schools has long been a tradition for many Asian Canadians. However, research that looks at teachers' experiences and perceptions in Canadian settings, especially the power dynamics embedded in biliteracy development at complementary schools, is scant. Moreover, the COVID‐19 pandemic brought challenges and opportunities to Chinese complementary schools. In this paper, we, as two Mandarin teachers and literacy researchers, used collaborative autobiographical narrative inquiry to tell our stories to unfold (1) how power dynamics regarding biliteracy/multiliteracy were enacted and reflected in a Chinese complementary school during the pandemic and (2) our re‐understanding of Mandarin teaching and learning from critical literacy and translanguaging perspectives. Although the pandemic is over, racial discrimination and social inequity continue to remain in our lives. By analysing our teaching moments and reflections, we hope this study could provide some insights into how critical literacy and translanguaging can be integrated into language and literacy education in multilingual and multimodal settings in the pandemic and post‐pandemic contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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49. Normality, safety and knowledge.
- Author
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Valaris, Markos
- Subjects
THEORY of knowledge ,MODAL analysis ,STRUCTURAL dynamics ,SPECTRAL counterparts ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Recent epistemology has seen a striking rise in interest in the notion of normality, including in the analysis of justified belief, defeasible reasoning, and knowledge. In the analysis of knowledge in particular, normality has been used to support modal analyses of knowledge, according to which knowledge is safely true belief. In this paper, I sound a note of caution regarding this proposal. As I will argue, the counterexamples that originally seemed to threaten the safety analysis of knowledge in its more traditional formulations have natural counterparts that continue to threaten the newer, normality‐based formulations. Moreover, these reformulated counterexamples seem to exploit structural features of the notion of normality itself, rather than one or another particular conception of normality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A metalinguistic and computational approach to the problem of mathematical omniscience.
- Author
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Soysal, Zeynep
- Subjects
LANGUAGE awareness ,MATHEMATICS ,FUNCTIONAL linguistics ,LINGUISTICS ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
In this paper, I defend the metalinguistic solution to the problem of mathematical omniscience for the possible‐worlds account of propositions by combining it with a computational model of knowledge and belief. The metalinguistic solution states that the objects of belief and ignorance in mathematics are relations between mathematical sentences and what they express. The most pressing problem for the metalinguistic strategy is that it still ascribes too much mathematical knowledge under the standard possible‐worlds model of knowledge and belief on which these are closed under entailment. I first argue that Stalnaker's fragmentation strategy is insufficient to solve this problem. I then develop an alternative, computational strategy: I propose a model of mathematical knowledge and belief adapted from the algorithmic model of Halpern et al. which, when combined with the metalinguistic strategy, entails that mathematical knowledge and belief require computational abilities to access metalinguistic information, and thus aren't closed under entailment. As I explain, the computational model generalizes beyond mathematics to a version of the functionalist theory of knowledge and belief that motivates the possible‐worlds account in the first place. I conclude that the metalinguistic and computational strategies yield an attractive functionalist, possible‐worlds account of mathematical content, knowledge, and inquiry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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