Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (17)
- Part of Periodical (6)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Postprint (1)
Keywords
- Patholinguistik (7)
- patholinguistics (7)
- Sprachtherapie (6)
- speech/language therapy (5)
- Age of acquisition (4)
- dysphagia (3)
- Animacy decision (2)
- Aphasie (2)
- Dysphagie (2)
- N400 (2)
- Schluckstörung (2)
- Schlucktherapie (2)
- Semantic classification task (2)
- Semantic typicality (2)
- Spracherwerb (2)
- Typicality (2)
- dyslexia (2)
- dysphagia therapy (2)
- language acquisition (2)
- speech and language therapy (2)
- swallowing disorders (2)
- Ageing (1)
- Agrammatismus (1)
- Aphasia (1)
- Category verification (1)
- Dysgrammatismus (1)
- Dyslexie (1)
- Erwerbsalter (1)
- Event-related potentials (1)
- Lese-Rechtschreib-Schwäche (1)
- Lese-Rechtschreibschwierigkeiten (1)
- Leseerwerb (1)
- Merkmalsauflistung (1)
- Merkmalsverifikation (1)
- Schluckstörungen (1)
- Semantic priming (1)
- Sprachentwicklungsstörung (SES) (1)
- Sprechapraxie (1)
- age of acquisition (1)
- agrammatism (1)
- ahasia (1)
- aphasia (1)
- aphasia treatment (1)
- apraxia of speech (1)
- attribute knowledge (1)
- cross-modal generalization (1)
- feature listing (1)
- feature verification task (1)
- impairments of lexicon and semantics (1)
- lexikalisch-semantische Störungen (1)
- reading development (1)
- reading skills (1)
- semantic memory (1)
- semantische Merkmale (1)
- semantisches Gedächtnis (1)
- sentence comprehension (1)
- sentence production (1)
- specific language impairment (SLI) (1)
- syntactic disorders (1)
- syntactic processing of noncanonical sentences (1)
- syntaktische Störungen (1)
Das 3. Herbsttreffen Patholinguistik fand am 21. November 2009 an der Universität Potsdam statt. Der vorliegende Tagungsband enthält die drei Hauptvorträge zum Schwerpunktthema „Von der Programmierung zu Artikulation: Sprechapraxie bei Kindern und Erwachsenen“. Darüber hinaus enthält der Band die Beiträge aus dem Spektrum Patholinguistik, sowie die Abstracts der Posterpräsentationen.
This paper presents a study of PH, a woman with aphasia, who shows a robust impairment in naming pictures of non-living relative to living things. Un-timed investigations of feature knowledge show similar performance across categories suggesting that, as in previous studies, the category effect may be arising at a post-semantic level. However, her performance on a timed feature verification task was slower for non-living than living things (relative to matched controls), in line with her naming. This suggests that the source of PH's category deficit is in fact semantic and that thorough investigation is necessary before claiming a post-semantic category specific deficit in word production. Finally, the results of an intervention study, which apparently eliminated the effect of semantic category on PH's naming, are reported.
Das Herbsttreffen Patholinguistik wird seit 2007 jährlich vom Verband für Patholinguistik e.V. (vpl) durchgeführt. Das 6. Herbsttreffen mit dem Schwerpunktthema "Labyrinth Grammatik: Therapie von syntaktischen Störungen bei Kindern und Erwachsenen" fand am 17.11.2012 in Potsdam statt. Im vorliegenden Tagungsband finden sich alle Beiträge der Veranstaltung: die vier Hauptvorträge zum Schwerpunkthema, die Vorträge aus Praxis und Forschung von vier Patholinguistinnen in der Reihe Spektrum Patholinguistik sowie die Abstracts der Posterpräsentation.
Am 20. November 2010 fand an der Universität Potsdam das 4. Herbsttreffen Patholinguistik statt. Die Konferenzreihe wird regelmäßig seit 2007 vom Verband für Patholinguistik e.V. (vpl) durchgeführt. Der vorliegende Tagungsband veröffentlicht die Hauptvorträge des Herbsttreffens zum Thema "Lesen lernen: Diagnostik und Therapie bei Störungen des Leseerwerbs". Des Weiteren sind die Beiträge promovierender bzw. promovierter PatholinguistInnen sowie der Posterpräsentationen enthalten.
Der vorliegende Tagungsband enthält alle Beiträge des 1. Herbsttreffens Patholinguistik, das am 24.11.2007 an der Universität Potsdam stattgefunden hat. Sowohl die drei Hauptvorträge zum Thema „Der Erwerb von Lexikon und Semantik – Meilensteine, Störungen und Therapie“ als auch die Kurzvorträge promovierter Patholinguisten sind ausführlich dokumentiert. Außerdem enthält der Tagungsband die Abstracts der präsentierten Poster.
Judging the animacy of words
(2016)
The age at which members of a semantic category are learned (age of acquisition), the typicality they demonstrate within their corresponding category, and the semantic domain to which they belong (living, non-living) are known to influence the speed and accuracy of lexical/semantic processing. So far, only a few studies have looked at the origin of age of acquisition and its interdependence with typicality and semantic domain within the same experimental design. Twenty adult participants performed an animacy decision task in which nouns were classified according to their semantic domain as being living or non-living. Response times were influenced by the independent main effects of each parameter: typicality, age of acquisition, semantic domain, and frequency. However, there were no interactions. The results are discussed with respect to recent models concerning the origin of age of acquisition effects.
Judging the animacy of words
(2017)
The age at which members of a semantic category are learned (age of acquisition), the typicality they demonstrate within their corresponding category, and the semantic domain to which they belong (living, non-living) are known to influence the speed and accuracy of lexical/semantic processing. So far, only a few studies have looked at the origin of age of acquisition and its interdependence with typicality and semantic domain within the same experimental design. Twenty adult participants performed an animacy decision task in which nouns were classified according to their semantic domain as being living or non-living. Response times were influenced by the independent main effects of each parameter: typicality, age of acquisition, semantic domain, and frequency. However, there were no interactions. The results are discussed with respect to recent models concerning the origin of age of acquisition effects.