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Language and Cognitive Science

ISSN Print:2058-6906
ISSN Online:null
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The (Non)-linguistic Effects of Motion Event Typology

Author: Yinglin Ji / Language and Cognitive Science / 2015,1(1): 1−22 / 2015-08-26 look866 look246

This study tests the hypothesis of linguistic relativity along two lines of research: a) how L2 learners of Chinese and English, respectively, syntactically package semantic components for caused motion (cause, manner, path) in... More >>

N400 Prediction Effects in Relative Constructions

Authors: Huili Wang* Ling Meng and Shuo Cao / Language and Cognitive Science / 2015,1(1): 23−54 / 2015-08-26 look919 look276

When a context of a strongly constrained sentence structure is formed, N400 as the ERP component of the follow-up word of the structure will be reduced in amplitude. Two accounts can explain this: a passive activation account a... More >>

A Psycholinguistic Account of L1 Lexical Transfer in L2 Production

Author: Jinting Cai / Language and Cognitive Science / 2015,1(1): 55−75 / 2015-08-26 look935 look358

In its development for more than five decades, numerous empirical language transfer studies have obtained many solid findings in L2 production; however, these findings often concern linguistic expressions but lack deep psycholi... More >>

Neural Correlates of Chinese and Japanese Semantic Processing

Authors: Hengshuang Liu and S. H. Annabel Chen / Language and Cognitive Science / 2015,1(1): 77−107 / 2015-08-26 look987 look336

Semantic processing is the ultimate goal of language communication. Chinese characters and Japanese kanji both contain semantic clues in their semantic radicals, However, as Japanese is learned phonologically instead of morphol... More >>

Conceptual Domain Transfer in the Grammaticalization of Demonstratives

Author: Rumiko Shinzato / Language and Cognitive Science / 2015,1(1): 109−132 / 2015-08-26 look955 look325

Data from the world’s languages illustrate that demonstratives grammaticalize as temporal auxiliaries/copulas, as focus markers, and as visual evidentials. However, these studies were done on the basis of individual languages o... More >>

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