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- 16Matthew C. Kelley
- 8Filip Nenadić
- 2Catherine Ford
- 2Juhani Järvikivi
- 2Louis ten Bosch
- 13phonetics
- 9spoken word recognition
- 5acoustic distance
- 5auditory lexical decision
- 5psycholinguistics
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- 8Linguistics, Department of/Presentations (Linguistics)
- 5Linguistics, Department of/Research Publications (Linguistics)
- 5Linguistics, Department of/Mental Lexicon 2018
- 4Linguistics, Department of/Massive Auditory Lexical Decision (MALD) Database
- 3Linguistics, Department of/Research Materials (Linguistics)
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Supplementary materials and data for "Perception and timing of acoustic distance"
2023-01-21
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
The files in this ZIP archive are supplementary materials for "Timing and perception of acoustic distance". There are three main subfolders: 1) "distance_rating" - contains the files to reproduce the distance rating task analysis 2) "duration_discrimination" - contains the files to reproduce the...
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2022-03-28
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
Pseudowords are used as stimuli in many psycholinguistic experiments yet they, remain largely under-researched. To better understand the cognitive processing of pseudowords, we analysed the pseudoword responses in the Massive Auditory Lexical Decision megastudy data set. Linguistic...
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2022-01-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
Using phonological neighborhood density has been a common method to quantify lexical competition. It is useful and convenient but has shortcomings that are worth reconsidering. The present study quantifies the effects of lexical competition during spoken word recognition using acoustic distance...
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Perception and timing of acoustic distance
2021-11-06
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
The notion of acoustic distance figures into many aspects of phonetics, including phonological neighborhoods. A measurement of word-level acoustic distance useful for cognitive modeling must account for two aspects of perception: listener sensitivity to acoustic differences and the duration...
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2021-08-01
Solange Zadnik, Scott James Perry, Benjamin V. Tucker
This research focuses on the voiced interdental fricative /ð/ and the voiceless interdental fricative /θ/. In casual speech, many sounds are changed through reduction. In the case of fricatives, they are often reduced to stop-like fricatives. This research focused on the variations of /ð/ and /θ/...
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Acoustic absement files
2021-01-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
These files contain acoustic absement and acoustic distinctiveness calculations for the words in the Massive Auditory Lexical Decision database. These files accompany the "Using acoustic distance and acoustic absement to quantify lexical competition" article in the Journal of The Acoustical...
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2021-12-03
Matthew C. Kelley, Scott James Perry, Benjamin V. Tucker
Forced alignment is increasingly used in phonetics to automatically produce boundaries between words and phones. These boundaries can have significant errors and are often only placed at some predetermined time interval, like every 10 ms. We discuss some potential remedies to these difficulties...
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2020-01-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
Multiple measures of vowel overlap have been proposed that use F1, F2, and duration to calculate the degree of overlap between vowel categories. The present study assesses four of these measures: the spectral overlap assessment metric [SOAM; Wassink (2006). J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 119(4), 2334–2350],...
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DIANA simulations material
2020-04-28
Filip Nenadić, Benjamin V. Tucker, Louis ten Bosch
This material includes scripts and results of a series of simulations performed using DIANA on Massive Auditory Lexical Decision project data. Version date: 25.04.2022.
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2020-12-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
Research on speech perception and lexical access often uses the activation and competition metaphor to describe the process of spoken word recognition. One way of expressing competition associated with a given word is its phonological neighborhood density, which is a calculation of similarity....