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The Handbook of East Asian Psycholinguistics: Volume 1, Chinese: Chinese v. 1

The Handbook of East Asian Psycholinguistics: Volume 1, Chinese: Chinese v. 1

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Cambridge University Press, 4/27/2006
EAN 9780521833332, ISBN10: 0521833337

Hardcover, 476 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 3.4 cm
Language: English

A large body of knowledge has accumulated on the cognitive processes and brain mechanisms underlying language. Much of this knowledge has come from studies of Indo-European languages, in particular English. Chinese, spoken by one-fifth of the world's population, differs significantly from most Indo-European languages in its grammar, its lexicon, and its written and spoken forms - features which have profound implications for the learning, representation and processing of language. This handbook, first published in 2006 as the first in a three-volume set on East Asian psycholinguistics, presents a discussion of the psycholinguistic study of Chinese. With contributions by over fifty leading scholars, it covers topics in first- and second-language acquisition, language processing and reading, language disorders in children and adults, and the relationships between language, brain, culture, and cognition. It will be invaluable to all scholars and students interested in the Chinese language, as well as cognitive psychologists, linguists, and neuroscientists.

Part I. Language Acquisition
1. Actions and results in the acquisition of Cantonese verbs Sik Lee Cheung and Eve V. Clark
2. Chinese children's knowledge of binding principles Yu-Chin Chien and Barbara Lust
3. Chinese classifiers
their use and acquisition Mary Erbaugh
4. Child language acquisition of temporality in Mandarin Chinese Chiung-chih Huang
5. Second language acquisition by native Chinese speakers Gisela Jia
6. Making explicit children's implicit epilanguage in learning to read Chinese Che Kan Leong
7. Emergent literacy skills in Chinese Catherine McBride-Chang and Yiping Zhong
8. Basic syntactic categories in early language development Rushen Shi
9. Growth of orthography-phonology knowledge in the Chinese writing system Hua Shu and Ningning Wu
10. Interaction of biological and environmental factors in phonological learning Stephanie Stokes
11. The importance of verbs in Chinese Twila Tardif
12. Grammar acquisition via parameter setting Charles Yang
13. Early bilingual acquisition in the Chinese context Virginia Yip
Part II. Language Processing
14. Word form encoding in Chinese speech production Jenn-Yeu Chen and Gary S. Dell
15. Effects of semantic radical consistency and combinability on the Chinese character processing May Jane Chen, Brendan S. Weekes, Danling Peng and Qin Lei
16. Eye movement in Chinese reading
basic processes and cross-linguistic differences Gary Feng
17. The Chinese character in psycholinguistic research
form, structure and the reader Douglas Honorof and Laurie Feldman
18. Perception and production of Chinese tones Allard Jongman, Yue Wang, Corinne B. Moore and Joan A. Sereno
19. Phonological mediation in visual word recognition in English and Chinese In-mao Liu, Jei-tun Wu, Iue-ruey Sue and Sau-chin Chen
20. Reading Chinese characters
orthography, phonology, meaning and the textual constituency model Charles A. Perfetti and Ying Liu
21. Processing of characters by native Chinese readers Marcus Taft
22. L2 acquisition and the processing of Mandarin tones Yue Wang, Joan A. Sereno and Allard Jongman
23. The comprehension of coreference in Chinese discourse Chin Lung Yang, Peter C. Gordon and Randall Hendrick
24. Lexical ambiguity resolution in Chinese sentence processing Yaxu Zhang, Ningning Wu and Michael Yip
Part III. Language and the Brain
25. The relationship between language and cognition Terry Kit-fong Au
26. Language processing in bilinguals as revealed by functional imaging
a contemporary synthesis Michael W. L. Chee
27. Specific language impairment in Chinese Paul Fletcher, Stephanie Stokes and Anita M.-Y. Wong
28. Brain mapping of Chinese speech prosody Jackson T. Gandour
29. Modelling language acquisition and representation in connectionist networks Ping Li
30. The manifestation of aphasia syndromes in Chinese Jerome L. Packard
31. Naming of Chinese phonograms
from cognitive science to cognitive neuroscience Dan-ling Peng and Hua Jiang
32. How the brain reads the Chinese language
recent neuroimaging findings Li Hai Tan and Wai Ting Siok
Epilogue
a tribute to Elizabeth Bates.

'It is particularly of great use to those who wish to get acquainted with the range of psycholinguistic research concerned with these languages and/or to examine how (language-)specific phenomena are discussed from the psycholinguistic point of view.' Language