2006
DOI: 10.1177/00238309060490010501
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Age-Related Impairments in the Revision of Syntactic Misanalyses: Effects of Prosody

Abstract: Two experiments examined whether young and older adults differ in comprehending sentences that contain temporary syntactic closure ambiguities. Experiment 1 examined age-related differences using the Auditory Moving Window (AMW) task, in which sentences were presented in a segment-by-segment self-paced fashion. Experiment 2 examined age-related differences using a sentence recall task, in which sentences were presented in their entirety. Sentences were constructed to have cooperating prosody (i.e., where proso… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…This finding is consistent with other work showing that the influence of prosody on other linguistic processes, such as syntactic processing (Kjelgaard et al, 1999; Titone et al, 2006) and word recognition (Wingfield et al, 2000), also remains well-preserved with age.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…This finding is consistent with other work showing that the influence of prosody on other linguistic processes, such as syntactic processing (Kjelgaard et al, 1999; Titone et al, 2006) and word recognition (Wingfield et al, 2000), also remains well-preserved with age.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…For example, an early seminal work of Miller and Isard (1963) demonstrated improved recall of oral presentation of nonsense words or ungrammatical strings of words if the items were presented with typical sentence prosody rather than simply spoken as a list. More recently, prosody has been shown to be important in processing ambiguous sentences (Joeks, Redeker, & Hendriks, 2009;Titone et al, 2006) and processing of humorous stories and jokes (Wennerstrom, 2011).…”
Section: Segmental and Prosodic Dimensions Of Foreign Accentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Just as elderly people benefit from select adult-controlled strategies that include reduced cognitive load, slower linguistic input, and intraturn pauses designed to facilitate syntactic analyses (Dagerman, McDonald, & Harm, 2006;Titon et al, 2006), so do children with auditory processing difficulties (Rowe, Pollard, & Rowe, 2005). Phrasal intraturn pauses improve the attention skills of children with auditory processing atypicalities (Rowe et al, 2005).…”
Section: Phrasal Intraturn Pausementioning
confidence: 99%