Japanese Psycholinguistics

A classified and annotated research bibliography

| University of Victoria
| University of Victoria
HardboundAvailable
ISBN 9789027237507 (Eur) | EUR 125.00
ISBN 9781556192548 (USA) | USD 188.00
 
e-Book
ISBN 9789027284280 | EUR 125.00 | USD 188.00
 
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This classified and annotated research bibliography is meant to serve as an introduction to the rich field of Japanese psycholinguistics, by providing an exhaustive inventory of what has been done in or about Japanese in a psycholinguistic sense. Thus, this volume captures the tradition of psycholinguistic research currently being pursued in Japan, its history and development over the past thirty years, and its current directions and research themes, as well as international research in modern psycholinguistics which targets the Japanese language as the focal point of empirical procedures or deductive analysis in psychology, linguistics, psycholinguistics, and cognitive science. The bibliography supports a broad view of psycholinguistics, acknowledging that psycholinguistic research in how natural language is learned, produced, comprehended, stored, and recalled now reaches beyond its traditional roots in the two disciplines of psychology and linguistics. The interested scholar will thus find entries from the traditional core of psycholinguistic research on natural language, as well as entries from related areas which have either influence or been influenced by psycholinguistic work on Japanese. Every article, text, and edited volume listed in the bibliography is available through normal library channels, and is thus accessible to the scholar interested in what psycholinguistic research has been done in or on the Japanese language, in Japan and internationally. The annotations for each entry have been especially written for this bibliographic inventory, and with the linguist, psychologist, and psycholinguist specifically in mind. The authors' intention is to maximize the usefulness of such an inventory by preparing annotations for the interested reader who wishes to know not only what the article contains but where it fits in the research tradition.
Publishing status: Available
Table of Contents
“This classified and annotated research bibliography captures the tradition, the history and development of psycholinguistic approaches in Japan over the past 30 years, as well as the current directions and research themes...this volume is meant to serve as an introduction to the rich field of Japanese psycholinguistics...there is no doubt that it will play an important role in the future development of Japanese psycholinguistics.”
Cited by (8)

Cited by eight other publications

Itaguchi, Yoshihiro, Yuho Suzuki, Chiharu Yamada & Kazuyoshi Fukuzawa
2021. Visual feedback of finger writing in a patient with sensory aphasia: a case report and theoretical considerations. Neurocase 27:1  pp. 12 ff. DOI logo
Itaguchi, Yoshihiro, Chiharu Yamada, Kazuyoshi Fukuzawa & Emmanuel Manalo
2019. Writing in the air: Facilitative effects of finger writing in older adults. PLOS ONE 14:12  pp. e0226832 ff. DOI logo
Miyamoto, Tadao
2007. The Evolution of Writing Systems: Against the Gelbian Hypothesis. In New Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3609],  pp. 345 ff. DOI logo
Ito, Yasuhiro & Takeshi Hatta
2003. Semantic processing of Arabic, Kanji, and Kana numbers: Evidence from interference in physical and numerical size judgments. Memory & Cognition 31:3  pp. 360 ff. DOI logo
Kawakami, Ayako, Takeshi Hatta & Terumasa Kogure
2001. Differential Cognitive Processing of Kanji and Kana Words: Do Orthographic and Semantic Codes Function in Parallel in Word Matching Task. Perceptual and Motor Skills 93:3  pp. 719 ff. DOI logo
Chikamatsu, Nobuko, Shoichi Yokoyama, Hironari Nozaki, Eric Long & Sachio Fukuda
2000. A Japanese logographic character frequency list for cognitive science research. Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers 32:3  pp. 482 ff. DOI logo
Hatta, Takeshi, Ayako Kawakam & Tomoko Deguchi
1999. Visual field effects on processing of Japanese content and function words: possibility of orthographic effects. Asia Pacific Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing 4:1  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2017. Bibliography. In The Handbook of Japanese Linguistics,  pp. 481 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 18 july 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Subjects

Main BIC Subject

CF: Linguistics

Main BISAC Subject

LAN009000: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General
ONIX Metadata
ONIX 2.1
ONIX 3.0
U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  94035000 | Marc record