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  1. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
  2. Year: 2011 Volume: 40
  3. Year: 2011 Volume: 40 Issue: 1
  4. Sources of history for 'a psychology of verbal communication'.
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Year: 2016 Volume: 45
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Year: 2011 Volume: 40
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Year: 2011 Volume: 40 Issue: 1
Effects of weight and syntactic priming on the production of cantonese verb-doubling.
Sources of history for 'a psychology of verbal communication'.
Bilingual reading of compound words.
Year: 2011 Volume: 40 Issue: 5-6
Year: 2010 Volume: 39
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Year: 2008 Volume: 37
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Sources of history for 'a psychology of verbal communication'.

Content Provider World Health Organization (WHO)-Global Index Medicus
Author O'Connell, Daniel C. Kowal, Sabine
Spatial Coverage Germany
Description Country affiliation: United States Author Affiliation: O'Connell DC ( Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA. doconnell@jesuits-mis.org)
Abstract There is a standard version of the history of modern mainstream psycholinguistics that emphasizes an extraordinary explosion of research in mid twentieth century under the guidance and leadership of George A. Miller and Noam Chomsky. The narrative is cast as a dramatic shift away from behavioristic principles and toward mentalistic principles based largely on transformational linguistics. A closer view of the literature diminishes the historical importance of behaviorism, shows a prevailing 'written language bias' (Linell in The written language bias in linguistics: Its nature, origins and transformations, Routledge, London, 2005, p. 4) in psycholinguistic research, and elevates some theoretical and empirical thinking of the late nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries on language and language use to a far more important role than has heretofore been acknowledged. In keeping with the theoretical and methodological perspective of the present article, it is particularly appropriate that the German philologist Philipp Wegener be 'given his due in the annals of linguistic sciences' (Koerner 1991, p. VI*). In his (1885/1991) Untersuchungen über die Grundfragen des Sprachlebens (Investigations regarding the fundamental questions of the life of language; our translation), he began his philological research with the investigation of actual speaking in everyday settings rather than with analyses of purely formal structure. Moreover, he emphasized understanding language and localized this function in the listener. Compatible with Wegener's own investigations is another aspect of speaking that has been most seriously neglected throughout the history of research on the psychology of verbal communication. For him, as well as for Esper (In C. Murchison [Ed.], A handbook of social psychology, Clark University Press, Worchester, MA, 1935), the basic and primary genre of dialogical discourse was not ongoing conversation, but the occasional use of speech in association with other activities. Both Bühler (Sprachtheorie, Fischer, Stuttgart, 1934/1982) and Wittgenstein (Philosophische Untersuchungen/Philosophical investigations, Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1958) have also emphasized the importance of the genre of occasional speaking. The article concludes with a discussion of historical shifts in the relationship between psychology and linguistics.
File Format HTM / HTML
ISSN 00906905
Issue Number 1
Volume Number 40
e-ISSN 15736555
Journal Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
Language English
Publisher Springer
Publisher Date 2011-02-01
Publisher Place United States
Access Restriction One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)
Subject Keyword Discipline Psychology Communication History Psycholinguistics Germany History, 19th Century History, 20th Century History, 21st Century Humans Language Methods Speech Historical Article Journal Article Review
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
Subject Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Linguistics and Language
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