
Syntactic Priming in Language Acquisition
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Content
- Intro
- Syntactic Priming in Language Acquisition
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication page
- Table of contents
- Chapter 1. Introduction to syntactic priming in language acquisition: Representations, mechanisms and applications
- What is syntactic priming and how does it relate to language acquisition research?
- Syntactic priming in typically-developing monolingual children
- Syntactic priming in multilingual populations
- Syntactic priming in atypically-developing populations
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 2. Syntactic priming and child language competence: A critical review and methodological considerations for future research
- What is structural priming?
- Theoretical contributions of structural priming in child language acquisition: The nature of early syntactic representations
- Other theoretical contributions
- Comprehension vs. production priming
- Structural priming as implicit learning and the lexical boost
- Structural priming and individual differences
- Conclusions and future directions
- References
- Chapter 3. Beyond the English passive: What we can learn from syntactic priming about L1 acquisition by exploring other structures and languages
- Introduction
- The nature of abstract syntactic representations
- Interfaces
- Input frequency effects in first language acquisition
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 4. How does syntactic priming experience support language development?
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Syntactic priming as implicit learning
- 3. The timecourse of syntactic priming effects in children
- 4. Between-group differences in the magnitude of priming
- 5. Between-individual variation in syntactic priming
- 6. The locus of implicit learning
- 7. Methodological issues
- 8. Conclusion
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 5. Sticking to what we know: Methodological limitations to generalizability
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Lack of structural variability
- 3. Lack of comprehension priming studies
- 4. Addressing both concerns: PP-attachment priming study
- 5. Additional limitations
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 6. Structural priming in bilingual children
- Introduction
- Cross-linguistic priming in bilingual adults: Evidence for shared syntax
- Within- and between-language priming in young bilinguals: Evidence for shared syntax
- Model of bilingual language production and remaining questions
- Structural priming and language experience
- Methodological features of priming studies with bilingual children
- Future directions for priming studies with bilingual children
- References
- Chapter 7. What can syntactic priming tell us about crosslinguistic influence?
- Introduction
- One system vs. two: Independent and autonomous?
- How different is bilingual development from monolingual development and what is the role of CLI?
- Crosslinguistic influence: Contexts and constraints
- Mental representations and CLI
- Language co-activation and CLI: Processing mechanisms
- Crosslinguistic structural priming in adult bilinguals
- Crosslinguistic priming in younger bilinguals and mechanisms of CLI
- Factors affecting structural entrenchment and the likelihood of CLI
- Questions (not yet) answered and future directions
- References
- Chapter 8. Syntactic priming and alignment in children with autism spectrum disorder
- What is ASD?
- Grammatical abilities in autistic children
- Imitation in autistic children
- Perspectives on syntactic priming in ASD
- Methods for studying syntactic priming in ASD
- Syntactic priming effects in autistic children
- Individual differences in autistic children's syntactic priming
- Conclusions
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 9. Syntactic priming as a window to investigate grammatical learning in non-typical populations
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Clinical markers: Why is structural priming a good candidate
- 3. Grammatical learning in children with DLD: The contribution of syntactic priming
- 4. Structural priming in aphasia: A rationale for the adaptation
- 5. Conclusions and future directions
- References
- Chapter 10. Syntactic priming and language intervention for children with grammatical deficits
- The role of input in grammatical intervention with children
- Properties of syntactic priming applicable to intervention
- Frequency is crucial
- Abstract categories are appropriate targets
- Targets at the clause level are appropriate
- Separation between the child's and adult's use of the target structure is important
- Implicit learning as the ideal outcome
- Interpreting the "lexical boost"
- Listening to the target structure
- Acquiring the target structure through conversation
- Targeting less frequent structures
- Variations in the priming paradigm that are applicable to intervention
- Strengthening the adult form relative to its competitors
- The benefits of high lexical verb variability
- The use of paired priming
- Other variations of priming that are applicable to language intervention
- A research agenda for syntactic priming based on intervention practices
- How "under control" must the target structure be?
- Does feedback change the process?
- The source of the primes
- Does a progression from narrow to broad constitute a change in mechanisms?
- Summary
- Funding
- References
- Index
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