Term linguistic performance was used by Noam Chomsky in 1960 to describe "the actual use of language in concrete situations".
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Term linguistic performance was used by Noam Chomsky in 1960 to describe "the actual use of language in concrete situations".
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E-language has been used to describe the application of artificial systems, such as in calculus, set theory and with natural language viewed as sets, while Linguistic performance has been used purely to describe applications of natural language.
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Hungarian Linguistic performance data show the same preference pattern as the English data.
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Linguistic performance introduces the concepts of early versus late commitment, where commitment is the point in the utterance where it becomes possible to predict subsequent structure.
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Linguistic performance explains that early commitment will favour the listener since early prediction of subsequent structure enables faster processing.
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The idea is to examine the patterns of HNPS to determine if the Linguistic performance data show sentences that are structured to favour the speaker or the listener.
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Errors of linguistic performance are perceived by both the speaker and the listener and can therefore have many interpretations depending on the persons judgement and the context in which the sentence was spoken.
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Errors in Linguistic performance can occur at any level of these psychological processes.
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Errors of linguistic performance are judged by the listener giving many interpretations if an utterance is well-formed or ungrammatical depending on the individual.
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Three types of brain injuries that could cause errors in Linguistic performance were studied by Fromkin are dysarthria, apraxia and literal paraphasia.
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Some common standardized tests for measuring syntactic Linguistic performance are the TOLD-2 Intermediate, the TOAL-2 and the CELF-R.
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