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E-grāmata: Handbook of Cognitive Linguistics and Second Language Acquisition

Edited by (Aoyama Gakuin University, Japan), Edited by (University of Michigan, USA)
  • Formāts: 576 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Mar-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781135604196
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  • Formāts: 576 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Mar-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781135604196
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Twenty-one international academics from the fields of psychology, linguistics, and second language acquisition (SLA) contribute 19 chapters to a resource for students and researchers, which describes the implications of cognitive linguistics (CL) for the study of SLA. The text includes chapters summarizing current CL perspectives on patterns of language, of language use, and of child language acquisition, followed by chapters demonstrating the relevance of the basic CL concepts, and theoretical frameworks for researching them, to the fields of SLA and language pedagogy. Lawrence Erlbaum is an imprint of Taylor & Francis. Annotation ©2008 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
x
PART I Introduction
1(24)
An introduction to Cognitive Linguistics, Second Language Acquisition, and language instruction
3(22)
Nick C. Ellis
Peter Robinson
PART II Cognitive Linguistics and cognition
25(212)
Aspects of attention in language
27(12)
Leonard Talmy
Prototypes in Cognitive Linguistics
39(27)
John R. Taylor
Cognitive Grammar as a basis for language instruction
66(23)
Ronald W. Langacker
Word Grammar, Cognitive Linguistics, and second language learning and teaching
89(25)
Richard Hudson
Spatial language learning and the functional geometric framework
114(25)
Kenny R. Coventry
Pedro Guijarro-Fuentes
Language without grammar
139(29)
William O'Grady
Children's first language acquisition from a usage-based perspective
168(29)
Elena Lieven
Michael Tomasello
Construction learning and Second Language Acquisition
197(19)
Adele E. Goldberg
Devin Casenhiser
Usage-based grammar and Second Language Acquisition
216(21)
Joan Bybee
PART III Cognitive Linguistics, Second Language Acquisition, and L2 instruction
237(310)
Learning to talk about motion in a foreign language
239(37)
Teresa Cadierno
Gestures and Second Language Acquisition
276(30)
Marianne Gullberg
Conceptual transfer and meaning extensions
306(35)
Terence Odlin
A unified model
341(31)
Brian MacWhinney
Usage-based and form-focused language acquisition: The associative learning of constructions, learned attention, and the limited L2 endstate
372(34)
Nick C. Ellis
Corpus-based methods in analyses of Second Language Acquisition data
406(26)
Stefan Th. Gries
Teaching construal: Cognitive Pedagogical Grammar
432(24)
Michel Achard
Cognitive Linguistics and second language instruction
456(33)
Andrea Tyler
Conclusion: Cognitive Linguistics, Second Language Acquisition and L2 instruction---issues for research
489(58)
Peter Robinson
Nick C. Ellis
Author index 547(8)
Subject index 555
Peter Robinson is a Professor of Linguistics and Second Language Acquisition in the Department of English at Aoyama Gakuin University. His research interests are in second language acquisition; applied psycholinguistics; cognitive psychology; cognitive linguistics; consciousness and awareness during SLA; attention and memory during SLA; second language task complexity; intelligence, aptitude and SLA; experimental research methods; SL syllabus design. He has published extensively in International Review of Applied Linguistics, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Language Learning, and Applied Linguistics. He is on the editorial boards of Asian Journal of English Language Teaching, International Review of Applied Linguistics, TESOL Quarterly, and Studies in Second Language Acquisiton.

Nick Ellis is Professor of Psychology at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His research interests address a range of issues in applied psycholinguistics. He has published broadly in the areas of first and second language acquisition; implicit and explicit learning; dyslexia; vocabulary acquisition; the role of working memory; and computational modeling. He was the editor of Language Learning from 1998-2002. Consideration of usage-based and connectionist models of language and their insights for second language learning have been important themes in his research for the past several years. His most recent work focuses on frequency effects and their possible implications for second language acquisition.