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Skip to Search Results- 4Benjamin V. Tucker
- 2Filip Nenadić
- 2Matthew C. Kelley
- 1Catherine Ford
- 1Daniel Brenner
- 1Graham Tomkins Feeny
- 4auditory lexical decision
- 2lexical processing
- 2phonetics
- 2psycholinguistics
- 1emotion
- 1mental lexicon
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2019-03-26
Graham Tomkins Feeny, Juhani Järvikivi, Benjamin V. Tucker
The present experiment investigated the role of vocal affect in spoken word recognition. Participants performed an auditory lexical decision task with stimuli articulated by a professional male actor with different acoustic realizations of vocal affect (Angry, Neutral, and Joyful). In addition,...
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2019-03-26
Pearl Lorentzen, Filip Nenadić, Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
Although most auditory lexical decision experiments are performed in a laboratory setting, humans tend to communicate in uncontrolled and noisy environments. We investigated, indirectly, the impact of noise and other distractions on lexical processing. The present study used a subset of words...
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2019-01-21
Catherine Ford, Filip Nenadić, Daniel Brenner, Benjamin V. Tucker
Contextually predictable, high frequency, competitor-dense words are often produced with less phonetically contrastive categories in spontaneous speech, often manifested with shorter durations. The present study investigates the role of temporal variation in the recognition of isolated words...
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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...