The present study investigates children's syntactic and pragmatic processing when specifying referents presented in short video clips. Within Relevance theory, the assumption of 'optimal relevance' implies that utterances are intended to involve the least processing effort on the part of the listener. In the present context, lexically specified NPs are assumed to be more in line with optimal relevance than pronouns. Subjects were 48 normally developing children aged 3;4-8;10 and 30 SLI children aged 5;1-8;9, divided into a low and a normal MLU group. Children's responses were coded according to levels of pragmatic processing and syntactic positions. Normally developing children's referent specifications were found to be increasingly relevan...
This research explores the development of pragmatic comprehension within the framework of relevance ...
Cantonese-speaking children's reference to story characters was examined in three different function...
Two experiments are reported which examine children\u27s ability to use referential context when mak...
The present study investigates children's syntactic and pragmatic processing when specifying referen...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterized as a deficit of structural l...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterised as a deficit of structural l...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterised as a deficit of structural l...
Speakers use different types of referring expressions depending on what the listener knows or is att...
Speakers use different types of referring expressions depending on what the listener knows or is att...
This study investigates the acquisition of pragmatic aspects of reference and its relationship to ad...
Choosing appropriate referring expressions requires assessing whether a referent is “available” to t...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterized as a deficit of structural l...
We examine the referential choices (pronouns/zeros vs. names/descriptions) made during a narrative b...
We examine the referential choices (pronouns/zeros vs. names/descriptions) made during a narrative b...
Understanding the referent of other's utterance by referring the contextual information helps in smo...
This research explores the development of pragmatic comprehension within the framework of relevance ...
Cantonese-speaking children's reference to story characters was examined in three different function...
Two experiments are reported which examine children\u27s ability to use referential context when mak...
The present study investigates children's syntactic and pragmatic processing when specifying referen...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterized as a deficit of structural l...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterised as a deficit of structural l...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterised as a deficit of structural l...
Speakers use different types of referring expressions depending on what the listener knows or is att...
Speakers use different types of referring expressions depending on what the listener knows or is att...
This study investigates the acquisition of pragmatic aspects of reference and its relationship to ad...
Choosing appropriate referring expressions requires assessing whether a referent is “available” to t...
Specific language impairment (SLI) has traditionally been characterized as a deficit of structural l...
We examine the referential choices (pronouns/zeros vs. names/descriptions) made during a narrative b...
We examine the referential choices (pronouns/zeros vs. names/descriptions) made during a narrative b...
Understanding the referent of other's utterance by referring the contextual information helps in smo...
This research explores the development of pragmatic comprehension within the framework of relevance ...
Cantonese-speaking children's reference to story characters was examined in three different function...
Two experiments are reported which examine children\u27s ability to use referential context when mak...