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Skip to Search Results- 3lexical processing
- 2auditory lexical decision
- 1phonetics
- 1priming
- 1realistic environment
- 1reduction
- 2Benjamin V. Tucker
- 2Filip Nenadić
- 1Amy Goodwin Davies
- 1Catherine Ford
- 1Daniel Brenner
- 1David Embick
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2019-03-14
Hezekiah Akiva Bacovcin, Amy Goodwin Davies, Robert J. Wilder, David Embick
We report results from two experiments in which the effects of rhyme prime (RP) are investigated by manipulating the properties of the interveners between prime and target. Studies of visual priming report that interveners have differing effects depending on the types of processing they require;...
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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...