Index

Abe, Kathrin, 111–112, 184n11

Abelson, Robert, 161, 190n17

Accent

acquiring a native-like accent, 3, 54, 85, 90

based on arrival in US, 81–86

as part of one’s identity, 24, 48, 81–88

intelligibility of, 47, 80, 87

as a measure of proficiency, 3, 44, 49, 80, 131

modification of, 86–88

positive aspects of, 86–88

Adefris, Wolansa, 154–155, 189n14

Adults and adulthood

bilingualism in, 75, 77

cognitive slowing in, 71–72

comparison to children, 3–4, 33, 90

interlanguage in, 46

mastery of a foreign language in, 18, 29, 35, 36, 41–44, 54, 66, 77, 107

mastery of sounds of a foreign language in, 82, 85, 88

metacognitive awareness in, 9–10, 90, 142

myths of language learning in, 1–5, 18

as strategic learners, 2, 4, 10–13, 17–18, 89–90, 91, 95, 107, 108, 124–125, 134, 145, 152, 167

strengths of adult learners, 1, 4, 8, 9, 10, 23, 26, 31, 36, 44, 53–55, 70, 73, 83, 90, 96, 97, 130, 137, 157

tip-of-the-tongue states in, 71, 142

weaknesses of adult learners, 2, 3, 8, 14, 17, 25, 39, 49, 65, 93, 118, 119, 121, 136, 138, 153

Africa, languages spoken in, 75, 81

Age of arrival (in US), 82–85

Alladi, Suvarna, 76, 180n10

Allerhand, Michael, 76–77, 180n10

Alzheimer’s disease, 73, 76

America. See United States

American culture, 62, 66–67, 68, 160–161, 162

Americans. See also United States

conversational norms of, 66–67, 89, 162–163

as from a low-context culture, 68

as prone to exaggeration, 62

An, Sun Gyu, 96–97, 182n4

Anchoring and adjustment, 17

Anger, idioms for, 112–113

Anglo-Norman, 98–99

Anglo-Saxon, 97, 98

Anthropology, 5, 6

Aphasia, 40–41, 86

Arabic, 22, 35, 38, 39, 75, 82

Area codes, 117

Aristotle, 11

Armor, David, 15, 173n4

Artificial intelligence, 5, 6, 13, 70

Aspiration, 82

Attitude, importance of positive, 167

Austin, John, 59, 177n5

Ausubel, David, 3, 35–36, 119, 125, 171n2, 175n3, 186n11

Availability heuristic, 13–14

Awful German Language, The, 69

Baddeley, Alan, 119–120, 123, 154–155, 185n5, 186n10, 189n14

Bahrick, Harry, 130, 147–148, 186n14, 188n6, 188n7

Bahrick, Phyllis, 147, 188n6

Bak, Thomas, 76–77, 180n10

Ballard, Clive, 74, 179n4

Bandura, Albert, 23, 174n12

Barlow, Jack, 61, 177n6, 177n7

Barrett, Deirdre, 157, 190n16

Bartlett, Frederic, 161–162, 190n18

Basic English, 105

Bayen, Ute, 8, 172n4

Beattie, Geoffrey, 73, 179n3

Bell Telephone Company, 115–116

Bent, Tessa, 80, 181n14

Berglas, S., 28, 175n15

Berko Gleason, Jean, 10, 172n8

Bialystok, Ellen, 54, 74, 75, 76, 77, 176n1, 179n5, 179–180n7, 180n8, 180n9

Big Bang Theory, The (TV series), 106

Bilingualism, 55, 74–77, 99

Bird, Elinor, 167, 191n21

Birdsong, David, 3, 171n2

Bird watching, 78–79

Black, John, 8, 172n5

Blaney, Paul, 155, 190n15

Blank Greif, Esther, 10, 172n8

Bon appétit anecdote, 45

Bonnefon, Jean-François, 134–135, 187n18

Borland, Ron, 20, 174n9

Bottom-up processing, 7–8, 91–95

Bowers, Cheryl, 8, 172n4

Bradford, Marshall, 3, 171n2

Bradlow, Ann, 80, 181n14

Brain, 4, 8, 21, 40, 73–74, 92

brain training, 74

comparison to a muscle, 74, 141

“Break someone’s heart” (idiomatic expression), 111–112

Broca’s (nonfluent) aphasia, 40

Brogan, T. V. F., 62, 177n8

Brown, Alan, 193

Brown, Peter, 193

Brown, Roger, 139–141, 187n1

Buehler, Roger, 15, 173n3

Bulgarian language, 101

Burmese language, 38

Burns, Alistair, 74, 179n4

Cambridge University, 162

Carney, Russell, 167, 191n22

Carroll, Raymond, 68, 178n12

Carson, Johnny, 151, 152

Castor and Pollux, 163

Central executive, 6, 120–121

Chabris, Christopher, 121, 185n8, 193

Chase, Stuart, 96, 182n3

Chase, William, 145, 188n4

Chaudhuri, Jaydip, 76, 180n10

Chess, expert vs. novice players, 28, 144–145

Childhood and children, 9, 53–54

bilingualism in, 74–75

cognitive processes of, 35, 118

comparison to adult language learning, 3–5, 18, 54, 74, 81–86, 90

critical period in language acquisition in, 85

education of, 10, 29, 33, 90, 165, 166

envy of, 4, 66

feelings of self-efficacy in, 25

metacognition in, 9, 10, 53, 54

readiness (cognitive state) in, 29

rhetorical questions addressed to, 64

China, as a high-context culture, 68

Chinese language

Cantonese, 38

Chinese-accented English, 80

in relation to other languages, 68, 101, 132, 138

Mandarin, 38, 68, 80, 101, 132, 138

as a “super hard” language, 12, 22, 38, 39, 40

Chronis, Andrea, 102, 183n5

Chunking, 117–118, 119, 132, 145

Clark, Herbert, 48, 176n10

Clopper, Cynthia, 80, 181n15

Cognates, 4, 46, 98, 100, 106

Cognitive load and overload, 121, 130–135

factors external to language, 132–135

factors internal to language, 131–132

Cognitive science, 71, 85, 110, 144, 155, 159

critical period for learning language, 85

definition, 5–6

insights based on, 5, 8

starfish analogy, 6

Cognitive scientists

general areas of research, 4–6

research in artificial intelligence, 13, 70

research on aging, 71

research on goal setting, 21

research on knowledge transfer, 106

research on memory, 116, 123

research on practice, 21, 143

research on pragmatics, 48, 53, 62

Common ground, 48–51, 68, 161

Concepts, as prototypes in language learning, 96

Conceptually driven processing, 7, 8, 91–95, 157

Conceptual similarities across languages, 110

Confirmation bias, 17–18

Cooper, Sheldon, 106, 109

Cooperative Principle, 56–59, 60, 72

Costa, Albert, 96–97, 182n4

Counterfactual thinking, 16–17

Cowan, Nelson, 119, 184n4

Craik, Fergus, 74, 75, 76, 122–123, 179n5, 179–180n7, 180n8, 180n9, 185–186n9

Crawford, Philip, 45, 176n7

Critical period, 85

Crowder, Robert, 136, 187n19

Cued response technique, 72

Cull, William, 102, 183n5

Cummings, K. M., 20, 174n9

Cutler, Anne, 65, 177n9

Czech language, 82, 101

Dahlgren, Donna, 142, 187n2

Dajani, Said, 74, 179n4

Dalgleish, Tim, 167, 191n21

D’Anna, Catherine, 102, 183n5

Danish language, 100

Data-driven processing, 7–8, 91–95

Davies, Caroline, 62, 177n8

Deary, Ian, 76–77, 180n10

Death, idioms for, 112

Decision making, 12, 15, 17, 18

De Luca, Cinzia, 120, 185n7

Dementia, 73–74, 76–77

De Neys, Wim, 134–135, 187n18

Depth of processing, 122–123, 150

Detroit, bankruptcy of, 30

Diacritics, 33

Dialect, 44, 80, 86, 98, 104, 108–109

Dictionaries, estimating vocabulary size with, 102–103, 104, 140

Diener, Ed, 69, 178n15

Digit span, 9, 116–118

age-related decline in, 118

Discourse goals, 61, 63

Distributed practice, 19, 21, 149, 156–157

Dodson, John, 132–133, 186n16

Dog, concept of, 110

Dörnyei, Zoltán, 28, 175n16

Dreifus, Claudia, 77, 180–181n10

Dress rehearsal (theater), 133–134

Duggirala, Vasanta, 76, 180n10

Dunlosky, John, 21, 149, 167, 174n10, 188n8, 191n22

Dunn, Barnaby, 167, 191n21

Dutch language, 38, 100

Earthquakes, 13

Ebbinghaus, Hermann, 126–130, 149, 186n12

Education (discipline), 5, 6, 29–30, 90

Ehrman, Madeline, 24, 174n13, 194

Eich, James, 154–155, 189n14

Elizabeth II, Queen of England, 62

Emery, Lisa, 138, 187n20

Encoding specificity, 154, 155, 156, 157

England, 98, 100

English language, 2, 158

as a baseline for learning other languages, 38–39

difficulty of learning, 35

figurative language in, 61–65, 105, 111–113

filled pauses in, 73

history of, 34, 97–100

in relation to other languages, 4, 5, 38, 46, 61, 78, 80, 82–85, 131, 148

interlanguage, 46–48

as a lingua franca, 75

native speakers of, 82, 83–85

phoneme-grapheme correspondence in, 33–35

phonemes of, 81–82

vocabulary, size of, 102–105

Ericsson, K. Anders, 145–146, 188n5

Ervin-Tripp, Susan, 72, 179n2

Exaggeration, 62

Expertise, 7, 29, 64, 78, 143–146

Extroversion, 69, 135

False cognates. See False friends

False friends, 98, 101

Federalist Papers, 104

Feeney, Aiden, 134–135, 187n18

Ferrucci, Luigi, 18, 173n6

Fertilizer fallacy, 20–21

Figurative language, 43, 59–65, 90

Figures of speech. See Figurative language

Filled pause, 73

Fine, Harold, 61, 177n6, 177n7

Finke, Ronald, 157, 190n16

Finnish language, 35

Fitzgerald, James, 104, 183n6

Flashcards, 3, 17, 106, 127

Flege, James, 54, 82–85, 176n1, 181n16, 181–182n17

Flouting (maxims of conversation), 57–59

Fluency, 146

achieving native-like, 3, 22, 143

bilingual, 74

defining, 40, 44, 77, 95

as a function of age, 3, 18, 66, 82–83

as a function of common ground, 49–50

interlanguage, 45

Fluency (cont.)

measuring, 40–45

in one’s native language, 4, 72

vs. proficiency, 40–41

of teachers, 88–90

reading aloud, 123

self-efficacy, 23–24, 87

Fogarty, Sarah, 154–155, 189n14

Fong, Geoffrey, 20, 174n9

Foreign Service, 16, 156

Foreign Service Institute (FSI), 36–40, 41, 48, 50

Forgetting curve, 128–129

Fossilization, 47–48, 50, 51

Foster, Donald, 104, 183n6

Fox, Patrick, 154–155, 189–190n14

Frankel, Arthur, 27, 175n14

Fratiglioni, Laura, 77, 181n12

Freedman, Morris, 76, 180n9

French language, 2, 16, 25, 45, 80, 89, 126, 143

formal vs. informal forms, 50

in high school, 143

in relation to other languages, 5, 33, 35, 39, 75, 82

as a root of English, 98–101

as a “world” language, 12, 38

Frontier words, 104

FSI Speak, 48

Fulmer, C. Ashley, 69, 178n15

Gardner, Howard, 5, 172n3

Gelfand, Michele, 69, 178n15

Gender (grammatical), 97, 101

Germanic, 97, 99, 100

German language, 2, 69, 75, 86, 107, 158, 166, 167

dialects of, 108–109

in relation to other languages, 112, 124, 127

phoneme-grapheme correspondence in, 34

as a root of English, 97–100

as a “world” language, 38, 39

Germany, 97, 108

as a country with one official language, 75

as a low-context culture, 68

Mark Twain in, 69

Ghoti, 34

Gibbs, Ray, 112–113, 184n12

Gilmartin, Kevin, 145–146, 188n5

Gilovich, Thomas, 16–17, 173n5

Gladwell, Malcom, 146, 188n5

Glisky, Elizabeth, 120, 185n6

Goal setting, 21–22, 44

Godden, Duncan, 154–155, 189n14

Golden, Ann-Marie, 167, 191n21

Gollan, Tamar, 74, 75, 179n5, 179n7

Graesser, Arthur, 8, 172n4

Grahn, Jessica, 74, 179n4

Grammar, 29, 42–43, 54, 55–56, 83–85

Grapheme, 33, 35

Greek language, 28, 35, 100, 101, 112

Green, David, 74, 75, 179n5, 179n7

Grégoire, Jacques, 118, 184n2

Grice, H. Paul, 56–57, 60, 61, 176–177n3

Griffin, Dale, 15, 173n3

Gruneberg, Michael, 165, 190n20, 194

Guillot, Marie-Noèlle, 40, 176n5

Habit formation, 19–23

how long it takes, 19

setbacks, 20

Hakuta, Kenji, 54, 176n1

Hale, Sandra, 138, 187n20

Hall, Edward, 68, 178n12, 178n13

Hambrick, David, 146, 188n5

Hampshire, Adam, 74, 179n4

“Hard” languages, 38

Hasher, Lynn, 120, 185n6

“Have a nice day” (expression), 66, 162

Hawaiian language, 81

Hayakawa, Sayuri, 96–97, 182n4

Healy, Noreen, 102, 183n5

Hebrew, 35

Heine, Marilyn, 142, 187n2

Heisig, James, 132, 186n15

Henry VIII, King of England, 100

Herrmann, Douglas, 165, 167, 190n20, 191n22, 191n23, 194

Heuristics, 13–18

Higgins, E. Tory, 69, 178n15

High-context culture, 68–69

High German (Hochdeutsch), 108–109

High school classmates, memory for, 146–147

High school Spanish, memory for, 137–138, 148–149

Hill, Emma, 167, 191n21

Hill, Susan, 154–155, 190n14

Hillary, Edmund, 88–89

Hindsight bias, 18

Hiraeth, 96

Hiragana. See Kana

Hitch, Graham, 119–120, 185n5

Hoffmann, Janina, 134, 186–187n17

Howard, Robert, 74, 179n4

Hu, Xiangen, 8, 172n4

Humor, 45, 57, 63, 106

Hungarian language, 86, 110

Husted Medvec, Victoria, 16–17, 173n5

Hyland, Andrew, 20, 174n9

Hyperbole, 62–63

Identity, establishing in a foreign language, 69, 70, 87

Idiolect, 104

Idiomatic expressions, 43, 55, 62–63, 65–66, 105, 112–113, 119, 125

Illocutionary force, 59–60

Imagery, use of vivid, 165–166, 167

Imai, Satomi, 83, 181–182n17

Incubation, 157

India, 76

Indirect requests, 62–63

Indonesian language, 38

Interagency Language Roundtable (ILR), 37–38, 41–44, 45, 55, 176n2

Interference

aging and, 138

proactive, 136–138, 157

retroactive, 136–137

Interlanguage, 45–48, 51

Introversion, 69, 135

Irony, 41, 62–63

Italian language, 38, 40, 75, 83, 99, 100, 101, 138

Japan

as a country with one official language, 75

as a culture that values indirectness, 62

as a high-context culture, 68

introversion in, 69

Japanese language, 2, 35

concept of dog in, 110

English loan words in, 131

in relation to other languages, 68, 101, 112

phoneme-grapheme correspondence in, 35

rate of speech, 78

as a “super hard” language, 38

writing systems of, 11, 131–132

Jarvis, Gilbert, 96, 182n3

Jaynes, Julian, 61, 177n7

Jeopardy! (TV series), 71

Johnson, Blair, 152, 189n11

Johnson, Mark, 111, 184n10

Jokes, understanding, 95

Jones, E. E., 28, 175n15

Kahneman, David, 13, 15, 172n1, 173n3

Kana, 11

Hiragana, 11, 132

Katakana, 11, 131–132

Kanji, 132

Karp, Anita, 77, 181n12

Kasper, Gabriele, 66, 70, 178n11, 178n16

Kaul, Subhash, 76, 180n10

Kaushanskaya, Margarita, 97, 182–183n4

Kesebir, Selin, 152, 189n11

Kesper, Nadja, 111–112, 184n11

Keysar, Boaz, 96–97, 182n4

Keyword mnemonic, 166, 167

Kim-Prieto, Chu, 69, 178n15

Kingham, Peter, 154–155, 189–190n14

Kirker, William, 150, 188n9

Knowledge structures. See Schemata; Scripts

Korea

as a culture that values indirectness, 62

as a high-context culture, 68

Korean language, 1–2, 68, 88

accent based on age of arrival in US, 82–85

in relation to other languages, 46, 64, 65, 101

rhetorical questions in, 64–65

as a “super hard” language, 38

Krampe, Ralf, 145–146, 188n5

Krashen, Stephen, 3, 171n2

Kreuz, Roger, 58, 62, 68, 177n4, 178n14

Krizan, Zlatan, 9, 172n7

Kroll, Judith, 77, 181n11

Kruglanski, Arie, 69, 178n15

Kuiper, Nicholas, 150, 188n9

Lakoff, George, 111, 184n10

Lally, Phillippa, 19, 173n8

Lambert, Wallace, 76, 180n8

Lamendella, John, 47, 176n9

Language and thought relationship, 96–97

Language-designated position (LDP), 37–38

Language Sherpa, 89

Language zombie, 70

Latham, Gary, 21, 174n11

Latin, 99, 100, 101, 163

Leaver, Betty Lou, 194

Legal doublets, 99

Lemma, 103–104

Levels of processing. See Depth of processing

Levelt, Willem, 72, 179n2

Leventer, Richard, 120, 185n7

Levin, Joel, 167, 191n22

Levy, Becca, 18, 173n6

Lexeme, 104

Li, Qiang, 20, 174n9

Lin, Pei-Ying, 96, 182n2

Linguistics, 5, 6, 8

Lip reading, 91, 95

Literal meaning, 59–61, 105

Littlemore, Jeannette, 65, 66, 178n9, 178n10

Liu, Serena, 54, 82–85, 176n1, 181n16

Loanwords, 35, 131

Locke, Edwin, 21, 174n11

Lockhart, Robert, 122–123, 185n9

Lockl, Kathrin, 9, 172n6

Locutionary act, 59

Long, Michael, 3, 171n2

Lord, Charles, 151, 188n10

“Love is a journey” (conceptual metaphor), 111

Low-context culture, 68–69

Low German (Plattdeutsch), 108–109

Luidia ciliaris (starfish), 6

Luk, Gigi, 76, 180n8

MacDonald, John, 91, 182n1

Mackay, Ian, 83, 181–182n17

Macnamara, Brooke, 146, 188n5

Madey, Scott, 16–17, 173n5

“Magical number seven,” 116–117

“Magic word” (politeness), 10

Maltz, Maxwell, 19, 173n8

Mandell, Arielle, 142, 187n3

Mappings, conceptual, 111–113

Marcus, Gary, 194

Marian, Viorica, 97, 182–183n4

Marinova-Todd, Stefka, 3, 171n2

Marsh, Elizabeth, 21, 149, 174n10, 188n8

Marshall, C. R., 48, 176n10

Martin, Michelle, 76, 180n8

Massed practice, 21

Mastery

attributions of, 1, 18

cognitive load and, 134

as a function of perceived language difficulty, 12, 38–39

grammatical, 83–85

interlanguage, 45–47, 50

phonemic, 81–85

planning fallacy and, 15–16

Mastery (cont.)

pragmatic, 54–55, 61, 70

as a result of practice, 143

self-efficacy, 24–25

vocabulary, 101–105

zone of proximal development and, 29–30

Matlin, Margaret, 153, 189n12

Maxims of conversation, 56–59

Maxim of Manner, 57

Maxim of Quality, 56–58

Maxim of Quantity, 56

Maxim of Relation, 57–58

May, Cynthia, 120, 185n6

McDaniel, Mark, 193

McGurk, Harry, 91, 182n1

McGurk effect, 91–93

McNeill, Ann, 20, 174n9

McNeill, David, 139–141, 187n1

Medical residents, 30

Memory. See also Chunking; Digit Span; Interference; Method of loci; Peg system; Recall vs. recognition; Release from proactive interference; Rote memorization

autobiographical, 97, 147, 152

long-term, 8, 19, 120, 124, 126, 137, 142, 147

recall, 116, 122, 126, 135–137, 139, 141, 147–148, 150, 152, 153, 154–155, 161–162, 166–167

recognition, 123, 126, 129–130, 147, 150–151, 163

semantic, 161

short-term, 117

working, 115–121, 124, 125, 130–132, 135, 145

Memory Palace technique, 164

Memory span. See Digit span

Memory theater, 164

Metacognition, 9, 10, 31, 54, 88, 90, 107, 138

Metalinguistics, 9, 10, 53–54, 101

Metamemory, 9, 10

Metaphor, 43, 61–63, 65, 110–113

conceptual, 111–113

frozen, 111

Metaphoric intelligence, 66

Metaphors We Live By, 111

Metapragmatics, 70

Metcalfe, Janet, 31, 175n18

Method of loci, 163–165, 167

Michelangelo, 1

Middle English, 97, 99

Miller, George, 116–117, 132, 184n1

Mnemonic devices, 165–167

Moffatt, Gregory, 3, 171–172n2

Monolingualism, 75–77

Mood, effects of, 118, 152, 155

Morgan, Charles, 154–155, 189–190n14

Mori, M., 70, 179n17

Mosteller, Frederick, 104, 183n6

Motivation, 5, 12, 15, 18, 22, 23, 24, 47, 86, 143

Mount Everest, 88–89

Multilingualism, 74–75

Multitasking, 75, 121

Murphy, Dennis, 154, 189–190n14

Muscle memory, 123

Myerson, Joel, 138, 187n20

Myths about foreign language learning, 3–5

Narrative structure, 8

Nathan, Mitchell J., 21, 149, 174n10, 188n8

National Foreign Affairs Training Center (NFACTC), 37

Native Americans, 162

Native speakers, pros and cons of learning from, 31, 88–90

Navrady, Lauren, 167, 190–191n21

Navratilova, Martina, 26–28

Neuroscience, 5, 6

New York Times, The, 45, 62

Nissan, Jack, 76–77, 180n10

Noise, 7, 94

Nonliteral language, 59–60. See also Figurative language

Nonsense syllable, 127–130

Norman (Old French), 98

Norman Invasion, 98, 99

Norway, 68

Norwegian language, 100

Ober, Beth, 142, 187n2

O’Connor, Richard, 20, 174n9

Office of the Inspector General (OIG), 39

Ogden, Charles, 105, 183n7

Ohsugi, Hironori, 121, 185n8

Oishi, Shigehiro, 152, 189n11

Old English, 97

Old French, 98

Olympics, winners at events, 17

Opera singers, 41

Original learning time, 127, 128

Ortony, Andrew, 113, 184n13

Oshlag, Rebecca, 113, 184n13

Osser, Harry, 78, 181n13

Oswald, Frederick, 146, 188n5

Other-reference, 150–151

Outliers, 146

Overgeneralization, 46

Overlearning, 28, 148–149

Owen, Adrian, 74, 179n4

Pauses, 72

Peal, Elizabeth, 76, 180n8

Peg system, 165, 167

Peng, Frederick, 78, 181n13

Perceptual generalization, 78–81

Perkins, David, 106–107, 183n8, 183n9

Perlmann, Rivka, 10, 172n8

Perlocutionary effect, 60, 64

Permastore, 148–149

Petrie, Hugh, 113, 184n13

Pham, Lien, 15–16, 173n4

Philosophy, 5, 6, 56, 59, 96, 11

Phoneme-grapheme correspondence, 33–35

Phonemes, 33, 81–82

difficulty in mastering in other languages, 81–82, 85, 86–88, 110

number in different languages, 81

Phonetic alphabet, 94

Pierro, Antonio, 69, 178n15

Pimsleur, Paul, 35, 175n2

Pisoni, David, 80, 181n15

Planning fallacy, 15–16

Polish language, 101

Politeness, 10, 42, 50, 51, 63, 107, 134–135

Pollio, Howard, 61, 177n6, 177n7

Pollio, Marilyn, 61, 177n6, 177n7

Pollyanna Principle, 153

Poppins, Mary, 11

Portuguese language, 2, 16, 155–156

in relation to other languages, 4, 99, 100

as a “world” language, 38

Positive information, superiority of, 153

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 154–155

Potts, Henry, 19, 173–174n8

Practice, 21, 106, 107, 143–149, 156–157

Pragmatics, 53–70, 87, 88, 95, 109

Pratte, Michael, 119, 184–185n4

Preminger, Alex, 62, 177n8

Primary Colors, 104

Proficiency, 28, 37–38, 40–45, 66, 101, 134, 156

advanced professional proficiency (level 4), 44, 55

elementary proficiency (level 1), 42

general professional proficiency (level 3), 43–44

limited working proficiency (level 2), 42–43

native or bilingual proficiency (level 5), 55

Prototypes, 96

Psycho-Cybernetics, 19

Psycholinguistics, 6

Psychology, 5, 6, 19, 23, 25, 29, 35, 129, 149, 160–161

Puns, 10

Rackham, H., 163, 190n19

Rawson, Katherine, 21, 149, 174n10, 188n8

Raybeck, Douglas, 165, 190n20, 194

Readiness (cognitive state), 29

Rebonato, Riccardo, 13, 173n2

Recall vs. recognition, 126, 147–148, 150

Reeve, Christopher, 139

Rehearsal, 124–125

Relearning, 20, 125–130, 137, 157

Relearning time, 128

Release from proactive interference, 137, 138, 157

Remembering the Kanji, 132

Restaurant scripts, differing, 158–161

Rhetorical questions, 60, 62–63, 64

Rieskamp, Jörg, 134, 186–187n17

Rivkin, Inna, 15–16, 173n4

Roberts, Richard, 58, 62, 68, 177n4, 178n14

Robots, 70

Roediger, Henry, 193

Roese, Neal, 18, 173n7

Rogers, Timothy, 150, 188n9

Romance languages, 99, 100, 138

Romanian language, 99

Romans, ancient, 99, 163, 164

Romansh, 75

Ross, Michael, 15, 173n3

Rote memorization, 3, 65, 112, 119, 123, 143

Rouder, Jeffrey, 119, 184–185n4

Rules of thumb. See Heuristics

Russian language, 38, 101, 112

Salomon, Gavriel, 106–107, 183n8, 183n9

Salthouse, Timothy, 71–72, 142, 179n1, 187n3

Sarcasm, 44, 58

Savings (relearning), 128–129

Scaffolding, 30

Scandanavian Languages, 97

Scarcella, Robin, 3, 171n2

Schadenfreude, 124

Schank, Roger, 161, 190n17

Schellenberg, Glenn, 167, 190–191n21

Schemata, 161–162

Schizophrenic language, 58, 68

Schleppegrell, Mary, 3, 119, 171–172n2, 184n3

Schneider, Wolfgang, 9, 172n6

School of Language Studies (FSI), 37

Scopas, 163

Scripts and script errors, 160–163

Segmentation, 78

Seinfeld (TV series), 117

Selective attention, 75

Self-defeating thoughts, 3

Self-efficacy, 23–26, 28

Self-esteem, 25

Self-fulfilling prophecy, 24–25, 28, 144

Self-handicapping, 27–28

Self-reference effect, 150–152, 166

Selinker, Larry, 45–48, 176n8, 176n9

Shailaja, Mekala, 76, 180n10

Shallow vs. deep processing, 122–124, 150, 152

Shaw, George Bernard, 34

Shekhtman, Boris, 194

Shenaut, Gregory, 142, 187n2

Shukla, Anuj, 76, 180n10

Silence, in conversation, 66–67, 68

Simile, 62–63, 110, 117

Simon, Herbert, 13, 145–146, 172–173n1, 188n4, 188n5

Simonides of Ceos, 163

Simons, Daniel, 121, 185n8, 193

Simulation heuristic, 14–17

Situational attribution, 27

Skowronski, John, 153 189n12

Slade, Martin, 18, 173n6

Slater, Pamela, 129, 186n13

Slavic languages, 101

Slowing hypothesis, 71–72

Smith, Giles, 26–27, 174n14

Smith, Steven, 157, 190n16

Smoking cessation, 20

Snow, Catherine, 3, 171n2

Snyder, Mel, 27, 174–175n14

Southwick, Steven, 154–155, 189–190n14

Spanish language, 35, 75, 110

concept of dog in, 110

as an example of depth of processing, 19–20

studying in high school, 24, 137–138, 143, 148–149

in relation to other languages, 80, 99–101, 112

phoneme-grapheme correspondence in, 35

as a “world” language, 38, 39, 40

Special English, 105

Speech act theory, 59–60

Speech errors, 44, 48

Speech habits, 48

Speech pathologists, 40, 86

Speech rate, 40, 78

Speed vs. accuracy, 71–73

Squire, Larry, 129, 186n13

Stang, David, 153, 189n12

Stenton, Robert, 74, 179n4

Stereotypes, 18, 144, 158

Streep, Meryl, 86

Stroop Test, 75

Study partner, importance of, 22

“Super hard” languages, 12, 22, 38, 40

Surampudi, Bapiraju, 76–77, 180n10

Sutton, E. W., 163, 190n19

Swahili, 38, 75

Swedish language, 38, 100

Switzerland, 75, 158–159, 161

Symons, Cynthia, 152, 189n11

Taylor, Shelly, 15–16, 173n4

Teachable moment, 30

Teasdale, John, 154–155, 189n14

Telephone, talking on, 93–94, 95

Telephone numbers, length of, 115–117

Telephone numbers, remembering, 135–136

Television, watching with no sound, 94–95

Tennis, 26–28, 31

10,000 hours to acquire expertise, 145–146

Tenzing, Norgay, 89

Tesch-Römer, Clemens, 145–146, 188n5

Thai, 39, 101

Thiele, Jonathan, 119, 184–185n4

Thomas, Margaret, 167, 191n22

Thompson, Charles, 153 189n12

Thomson, Donald, 154, 189n13

Time of day, studying at same, 23

Time pressure, 132, 134

Tip of the tongue (TOT) states, 71, 139–143

Top-down processing, 7–8, 64, 91–95, 157

Transfer, 5, 46, 79–80, 106–109, 124

Trebek, Alex, 71

Trehub, Sandra, 167, 190–191n21

Tucker, G. Richard, 75, 179n6

Tulving, Endel, 122–123, 154, 185–186n9, 189n13

Turkey, 69

Tversky, Amos, 13, 15, 172–173n1, 173n3

Twain, Mark, 69

Ugly American stereotype, 158

Unabomber, 104

Uncanny valley, 70

Understatement, 62–63

United States, 2, 80, 90, 159, 161. See also Americans

accents of South Koreans in, 82–85

chunking dates from US history, 116–117, 120

classifying regional dialects of, 80

conversational norms of, 66–67, 89, 162–163

as a culture that values directness, 62

dialect of German taught in, 108

as a low-context culture, 68

scripts (expectations) in, 159–161

Unspeakableness project, 96

Urdu, 38

Van der Linden, Martial, 118, 184n2

van Jaarsveld, Cornelia, 19, 173–174n8

Verhaeghen, Paul, 120, 185n7

Vocabulary, 17, 26, 40, 70, 97–100, 109, 110, 137, 138, 140, 164

as part of one’s common ground, 48

idiolect, 104

as an indicator of proficiency, 42–45, 46, 55, 56, 61, 101

memory for, 119, 123–125, 127, 130, 149, 153, 154, 166

metalinguistic skill in learning, 54

rate of speech, 78

receptive, 103–105

self-reference effect, 87

size in Basic English, 105

size in bilinguals, 76

size in English, 101–104

size needed in a foreign language, 101–105, 110

strategies for building, 19, 28, 65, 66, 90, 97–100, 106, 119, 125, 137, 149

“tip of the tongue” and, 139–143

Vohs, Kathleen, 18, 173n7

Voice of America, 105

von Helversen, Bettina, 134, 186–187n17

Vygotsky, Lev, 29, 175n17

Walker, W. Richard, 153 189n12

Wallace, David, 104, 183n6

Wang, Alvin, 167, 191n22

Wang, Hui-Xin, 77, 181n12

Ward, Thomas, 157, 190n16

Wardle, Jane, 19, 173–174n8

Warich, Matthias, 111–112, 184n11

War of the Ghosts, The, 162

Weingartner, Herbert, 154–155, 189–190n14

Weiss, Michael, 167, 190–191n21

Welsh language, 96

Wernicke’s (fluent) aphasia, 41

Whorf, Benjamin, 96, 182n3

Wikipedia, Simple English, 105

Wilensky, Robert, 8, 172n5

William the Conqueror, 98

Willingham, Daniel, 21, 149, 174n10, 188n8

Winblad, Bengt, 77, 181n12

Wittlinger, Roy, 147, 188n6

Wood, Benjamin, 86, 182n18

Word order, 46, 107

Workbench, metaphor for memory, 120

World knowledge, 8, 71, 118, 161

“World” languages, 12, 38

Würtz, Elizabeth, 68, 178n13, 178n14

Wyner, Gabriel, 194

Yeni-Komshian, Grace, 54, 82–85, 176n1, 181n16

Yerkes, Robert, 132–133, 186n16

Yerkes–Dodson law, 132–134

Yong, Hua, 20, 174n9

Zacks, Rose, 120, 185n6

Zechmeister, Eugene, 102, 183n5

Zell, Ethan, 9, 172n7

Zimmer, Ben, 34, 175n1

Zonderman, Alan, 18, 173n6

Zone of proximal development (ZPD), 29–31, 125