Search
Skip to Search Results- 47Tucker, Benjamin V.
- 5Kelley, Matthew C.
- 3Perry, Scott James
- 3Podlubny, Ryan G.
- 2Holko, Gabriela
- 2Mukai, Yoichi
- 10Massive Auditory Lexical Decision
- 4Spoken Word Recognition
- 3Phonetics
- 3spoken word recognition
- 2Linguistics
- 2MALD
- 41Linguistics, Department of
- 18Linguistics, Department of/Massive Auditory Lexical Decision (MALD) Database
- 16Linguistics, Department of/Research Publications (Linguistics)
- 5Linguistics, Department of/Research Materials (Linguistics)
- 5WISEST Summer Research Program
- 5WISEST Summer Research Program/WISEST Research Posters
-
2021-10-06
Lohmann, Arne, Tucker, Benjamin V.
This article reports the results of an auditory lexical decision task, testing the processing of phonetic detail of English noun/verb conversion pairs. The article builds on recent findings showing that the frequent occurrence in certain prosodic environments may lead to the storage of...
-
2021-08-01
Morin, Gabrielle, Tucker, Benjamin V.
Gabrielle Morin, and Benjamin Tucker, “The acoustic characteristics of um and uh in spontaneous Canadian English,” in The 10th Workshop on Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech (DiSS 2021), St. Denis, France, August 2021, pp. 53-58. The present study investigates and compares the acoustic...
-
The effect of phonological-orthographic consistency and phonetic reduction in spoken word recognition: Data and supplementary material
The effect of phonological-orthographic consistency and phonetic reduction in spoken word recognition: Data and supplementary material
Download2019-01-01
Mukai, Yoichi, Järvikivi, Juhani, Tucker, Benjamin V.
Data and supplementary material relating to "The effect of phonological-orthographic consistency and phonetic reduction in spoken word recognition"
-
2014
A frequently replicated finding is that the frequency of words affects their phonetic shape. In English, high frequency words have been shown to contain more centralized vowels than low frequency words. By contrast, a recent study on vowel articulation in German has shown a contrary finding. At...
-
2010
Warner, Natasha, Tucker, Benjamin V.
Abstract phonological patterns and detailed phonetic patterns can combine to produce unusual acoustic results, but criteria for what aspects of a pattern are phonetic and what aspects are phonological are often disputed. Early literature on Romanian makes mention of nasal devoicing in word-final...