图书简介
A large body of knowledge has accumulated in recent years on the cognitive processes underlying language, much of which comes from studies of Indo-European languages, in particular English. This groundbreaking volume explores the languages of South and Southeast Asia, which differ significantly from Indo-European languages in their grammar, lexicon and spoken forms. This book raises new questions in psycholinguistics and enables readers to re-evaluate previous models in light of new research. With thirty-six chapters divided into three parts - Language Acquisition, Language Processing and Language and Brain - it examines contemporary topics alongside new findings in areas such as first and second language acquisition, the development of literacy, the diagnosis of language and reading disorders, and the relationship between language, brain, culture and cognition. It will be invaluable to all those interested in the languages of South and Southeast Asia, as well as psychologists, linguists, educationalists, speech therapists and neuroscientists.
Introduction Heather Winskel; Part I. Language Acquisition: Section 1. Spoken Language: 1. Studying language acquisition cross-linguistically Sabine Stoll and Elena Lieven; 2. Infant directed speech: social and linguistic pathways in tonal and non-tonal languages Christine Kitamura; 3. Pragmatic development of Mandarin-speaking young children: focus on communicative acts between children and their mothers Jing Zhou; 4. Referential forms in Thai children’s narratives Theeraporn Ratitamkul; 5. The acquisition of tense and aspect Yasuhiro Shirai; 6. The acquisition of Malay numeral classifiers Khazriyati Salehuddin; 7. The acquisition of Vietnamese numeral classifiers Jennie Tran; 8. An overview of the acquisition of Malay wh-questions Norhaida Aman; 9. Marking plurals: the acquisition of nominal number inflection in Marathi Shalmalee Pitale and Vaiyayanthi M. Sarma; 10. Issues in the acquisition of Tamil verb morphology Vaijayanthi M. Sarma; 11. Fast mapping of novel words in bi/multilinguals Vishnu K. K. Nair, Sunil Kumar Ravi, Sapna Bhat and Shyamala K. Chengappa; 12. Studies on the acquisition of morphology and syntax among Malay children in Malaysia: issues, challenges and needs Rogayah A. Razak; 13. Issues in developing grammatical assessment tools in Chinese and Malay for speech and language therapy Lixian Jin, Rogayah A. Razak, Jannet Wright and John Song; Section 2. Written Language: 14. Reading and reading acquisition in European languages Brian Byrne, Stefan Samuelsson and Richard K. Olson; 15. Learning to read and write in Thai Heather Winskel; 16. Learning to read and write in Indonesian/Malaysian: a transparent alphabetic orthography Heather Winskel and Lay Wah Lee; 17. Literacy in Kannada, an alpha-syllabic orthography R. Malatesha Joshi; 18. Reading in Tamil: a more alphabetic and less syllabic akshara based orthography Bhuvaneshwari B. and Prakash Padakannaya; 19. Akshara-syllable mappings in Bengali: a language-specific skill for reading Shruti Sircar and Sonali Nag; 20. Diversity in bilingual children’s spelling skill development: the case of Singapore Susan Rickard Liow; Part II. Language Processing: 21. Tones and voice registers Arthur S. Abramson; 22. How to compare tones Nan Xu, Virginie Attina, Benjawan Kasisopa and Denis Burnham; 23. Studying sentence generation during scene viewing in Hindi with eye tracking Ramesh Mishra; 24. Thai specific and general reading processes in developing and skilled Thai readers Jeesun Kim and Chris Davis; 25. Eye movement guidance in reading unspaced text in Thai and Chinese Jie-Li Tsai; 26. SE Asian writing systems: a challenge to current models of visual information processing in reading Ronan Reilly; 27. Preferred argument structure and Thai varieties of English: evidence of cognitive processing limitations? Thom Huebner; 28. Cross-language perception of word-final stops Kimiko Tsukada; 29. Uncovering bilingual memory representations Winston D. Goh, Lidia Suárez and Kelly Yeo; 30. Eye movements and reading in the alphasyllabic scripts of South and Southeast Asia Heather Winskel, Prakash Padakannaya and Aparna Pandey; Part III. Language and Brain: 31. Aphasia to imaging: the neurolinguistic endeavor as it reflects on South and Southeast Asian languages Loraine K. Obler and Avanthi Niranjan Paplikar; 32. Neural bases of lexical tones Jackson T. Gandour and Ananthanarayan Krishnan; 33. Hemispheric asymmetry in word recognition for a right-to-left script: the case of Urdu Chaitra Rao, Jyotsna Vaid and Hsin-Chin Chen; 34. The declarative procedural model of language: a new framework for studying the non-inflecting languages of Southeast Asia? Tomasina Oh; 35. Language mixing in bilingual aphasia: an Indian perspective Sapna Bhat and Shyamala Chengappa; 36. The relationship between language and cognition Heather Winskel and Sudaporn Luksaneeyanawin.
Trade Policy 买家须知
- 关于产品:
- ● 正版保障:本网站隶属于中国国际图书贸易集团公司,确保所有图书都是100%正版。
- ● 环保纸张:进口图书大多使用的都是环保轻型张,颜色偏黄,重量比较轻。
- ● 毛边版:即书翻页的地方,故意做成了参差不齐的样子,一般为精装版,更具收藏价值。
关于退换货:
- 由于预订产品的特殊性,采购订单正式发订后,买方不得无故取消全部或部分产品的订购。
- 由于进口图书的特殊性,发生以下情况的,请直接拒收货物,由快递返回:
- ● 外包装破损/发错货/少发货/图书外观破损/图书配件不全(例如:光盘等)
并请在工作日通过电话400-008-1110联系我们。
- 签收后,如发生以下情况,请在签收后的5个工作日内联系客服办理退换货:
- ● 缺页/错页/错印/脱线
关于发货时间:
- 一般情况下:
- ●【现货】 下单后48小时内由北京(库房)发出快递。
- ●【预订】【预售】下单后国外发货,到货时间预计5-8周左右,店铺默认中通快递,如需顺丰快递邮费到付。
- ● 需要开具发票的客户,发货时间可能在上述基础上再延后1-2个工作日(紧急发票需求,请联系010-68433105/3213);
- ● 如遇其他特殊原因,对发货时间有影响的,我们会第一时间在网站公告,敬请留意。
关于到货时间:
- 由于进口图书入境入库后,都是委托第三方快递发货,所以我们只能保证在规定时间内发出,但无法为您保证确切的到货时间。
- ● 主要城市一般2-4天
- ● 偏远地区一般4-7天
关于接听咨询电话的时间:
- 010-68433105/3213正常接听咨询电话的时间为:周一至周五上午8:30~下午5:00,周六、日及法定节假日休息,将无法接听来电,敬请谅解。
- 其它时间您也可以通过邮件联系我们:customer@readgo.cn,工作日会优先处理。
关于快递:
- ● 已付款订单:主要由中通、宅急送负责派送,订单进度查询请拨打010-68433105/3213。
本书暂无推荐
本书暂无推荐