In Part I, we have analyzed various aspects that condition the production of conventional language. For this purpose, we have described the biological elements that intervene the production of the word and then stop at the psychological aspects of production, something we did through an approach to one of the most critical pragma-linguistic manifestations: ‘(dis)politeness.’ In this Part II, we will analyze one of the most known production models of those proposed by Psycholinguistics, which, that considers the processes involved in the production of language are of the psychological/cognitive type, something that also supports Cognitive Psychology. We will conclude this study with the proposal of a model of conventional language production...
THE INTERIM since the previous review can be characterized as one of changes for the psychology of l...
As the development of computer technology and Internet use, system utterance producing gains more an...
This article is reproduced from the previous edition, volume 22, pp. 14879–14882, © 2001, Elsevier L...
In Part I, we have analyzed various aspects that condition the production of conventional language. ...
There are two parts to this work. In this Part I, we will analyze various aspects that condition the...
Humans can understand their language due to the processes in the brain. It is very easy for language...
Humans can understand their language due to the processes in the brain. It is very easy for language...
Psycholinguistic models of verbal language production face at the difficulty of formalizing the ment...
In this chapter, we survey the processes of recognizing and producing words and of understanding and...
Language characterizes one of the most important and pervasive aspects of human behavior. Through b...
Research on speech production investigates the cognitive processes involved in transforming thoughts...
Recent studies in linguistic theory have undeniably gained remarkable progress, yet they have fallen...
This report describes research done at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of the Massachusetts I...
This paper discusses what it would.mean to have a psychological model of the language production pro...
The human mind is a black box. We know what goes into the box and what goes out, but we do not know ...
THE INTERIM since the previous review can be characterized as one of changes for the psychology of l...
As the development of computer technology and Internet use, system utterance producing gains more an...
This article is reproduced from the previous edition, volume 22, pp. 14879–14882, © 2001, Elsevier L...
In Part I, we have analyzed various aspects that condition the production of conventional language. ...
There are two parts to this work. In this Part I, we will analyze various aspects that condition the...
Humans can understand their language due to the processes in the brain. It is very easy for language...
Humans can understand their language due to the processes in the brain. It is very easy for language...
Psycholinguistic models of verbal language production face at the difficulty of formalizing the ment...
In this chapter, we survey the processes of recognizing and producing words and of understanding and...
Language characterizes one of the most important and pervasive aspects of human behavior. Through b...
Research on speech production investigates the cognitive processes involved in transforming thoughts...
Recent studies in linguistic theory have undeniably gained remarkable progress, yet they have fallen...
This report describes research done at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of the Massachusetts I...
This paper discusses what it would.mean to have a psychological model of the language production pro...
The human mind is a black box. We know what goes into the box and what goes out, but we do not know ...
THE INTERIM since the previous review can be characterized as one of changes for the psychology of l...
As the development of computer technology and Internet use, system utterance producing gains more an...
This article is reproduced from the previous edition, volume 22, pp. 14879–14882, © 2001, Elsevier L...