1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910524866503321

Autore

Osgood Charles Egerton

Titolo

Psycholinguistics : A Survey of Theory and Research Problems / / edited by Charles E. Osgood and Thomas A. Sebeok. With A survey of psycholinguistic research, 1954-1964, by A. Richard Diebold, and the psycholinguists, by George A. Miller

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Indiana University Press, 1965

Bloomington, : Indiana University Press, [1965]

©[1965]

ISBN

0-253-04866-4

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (1 online resource xii, 307 pages) : : illustrations

Collana

Indiana University studies in the history and theory of linguistics

Altri autori (Persone)

DieboldA. Richard

Soggetti

Psycholinguistik

Onderzoek

Taalpsychologie

Language and languages

Information measurement

Communication

Psycholinguistique

Linguistique

Psychology

Language

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Survey of psycholinguistic research, 1954-1964 / Diebold, A Richard -- Psycholinguists / Miller, George A., George Armitage, 1920-

Psycholinguistics / edited by Charles E. Osgood and Thomas A. Sebeok -- Survey of psycholinguistic research, 1954-1964 / Diebold, A Richard -- Psycholinguists / Miller, George A., George Armitage, 1920-

Sommario/riassunto

The first publication of Psycholinguistics in 1954 signalled a revolution in linguistic theory. Until that time, psycholinguistics, which developed severally from language-oriented research in psychology and from



psychologically-oriented research with verbal behavior in linguistics, remained on the peripheries of the established disciplines. The renewed interest and intensified cooperative work witnessed in this book resulted largely from the impact of modern science on linguistics and the questions raised by other behavioral scientists. The contributors, among them psychologists Donald E. Walker, John B. Carroll, and Kellog Wilson and linguists Sol Saporta and Leonard D. Newmark, examine the ap-proaches of the linguist, the learning theorist, and the in-formation theorist to appraise their utility for handling a variety of problems, and to discover how they can be placed in a common conceptual framework.