The Handbook of East Asian Psycholinguistics
The Handbook of East Asian Psycholinguistics 3 Volume Paperback Set Series

Coordinators: Nakayama Mineharu, Mazuka Reiko, Shirai Yasuhiro

This handbook presents a state-of-the-art discussion of the psycholinguistic study of Japanese.

Language: English
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Handbook of east asian psycholinguistics, volume 2 japanese
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428 p. · 2.7x22.9 cm · Hardback
A large body of knowledge has accumulated in recent years on the cognitive processes and brain mechanisms underlying language. Much of this knowledge has come from studies of Indo-European languages, in particular English. Japanese, a language of growing interest to linguists, 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, the second in a three-volume series on East Asian psycholinguistics, presents a state-of-the-art discussion of the psycholinguistic study of Japanese. 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 Japanese language, as well as cognitive psychologists, linguists, and neuroscientists.
Part I. Language Acquisition: 1. Ontogeny of language Nubou Masataka; 2. Caregiver's speech Toshiki Murase and Tamiko Ogura; 3. The intrinsic linkage between gesture and speech in the prelinguistic stage Keiko Ejiri and Nobuko Uchida; 4. Infant speech perception Akiko Hayashi; 5. Phonological acquisition Mitsuhiko Ohta; 6. Mechanism of lexical development: implications from Japanese children's word learning Mutsumi Imai; 7. The acquisition of nouns and verbs in Japanese Yuriko Oshima-Takane; 8. The acquisition of verbal nouns Yutaka Sato and Yoshi Yamashita; 9. The acquisition of Japanese numeral classifiers Kasumi Yamamoto; 10. The acquisition of case markers Hiromi Morikawa; 11. The acquisition of tense and aspect Yasuhiro Shirai; 12. On the origin of children's errors: the case of Japanese negation and direct passive Tetsuya Sano; 13. Binding theory in UG and first language acquisition of Japanese Barbara Lust; 14. The acquisition of the particles, 'ne', 'yo' and 'no' Haruko Minegishi Cook; 15. The acquisition of linguistic politeness in Japanese Keiko Nakamura; 16. Children's narrative structures Masahiko Minami; 17. Memory talk and testimony in children Makiko Naka; 18. Developmental dyslexia Jun Yamada; 19. Japanese sign language Takashi Torigoe; 20. The role of an innate acquisition device in second language acquisition Kazue Kanno; 21. Japanese, the grammar of reflexives, and second language acquisition Margaret Thomas; 22. Processes in L2 Japanese sentence production Noriko Iwasaki; 23. Development of lexical competence among second-language readers Keiko Koda; 24. Reading in Japanese as a second language Yukie Horiba; 25. International code-switching in Japanese and English Miwa Nishimura; Part II. Language Processing: 26. Phonetic and phonological organizations of speech in Japanese Haruo Kubozono; 27. Speech segmentation by Japanese listeners: its language-specificity and language-universality Takashi Otake; 28. Prosody in sentence processing Jennifer Venditti; 29. Speech errors Yasushi Terao; 30. Effects of word properties on Japanese sentence processing Tadahisa Kondo and Reiko Mazuka; 31. Orthographic processing Hirofumi Saito; 32. Lexical access Taeko Wydell; 33. Incrementality in Japanese sentence processing Yuki Kamide; 34. Processing alternative word orders Edson Miyamoto; 35. Processing of relative clauses in Japanese: coping with multiple ambiguities Yuki Hirose; 36. Processing of empty categories in Japanese Tsutomu Sakamoto; 37. Difficulty of certain sentence constructions in comprehension Mineharu Nakayama, Shravan Vashisth and Richard L. Lewis; 38. Reading and working memory Mariko Osaka; 39. Sentence production in Japanese Hiroko Yamashita and Franklin Chang; 40. Neural basis of syntactic processing in Japanese Hiroko Hagiwara; 41. The competition model Yoshinori Sasaki and Brian McWhinney; 42. Connectionist models Michiro Negishi; 43. Computational linguistics Masayuki Asahara, Yasuharu Den and Yuji Matsumoto; 44. Language and gesture as a single communicative system Nobuhiro Furuyama.
Mineharu Nakayama is Associate Professor in the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures, The Ohio State University.
Reiko Mazuka is Head of the Laboratory for Language Development at the RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan, and also Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology, Duke University.
Yasuhiro Shirai is Professor of Linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Pittsburgh.