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Skip to Search Results- 172Linguistics, Department of
- 75Linguistics, Department of/Research Publications (Linguistics)
- 22Linguistics, Department of/Massive Auditory Lexical Decision (MALD) Database
- 21Linguistics, Department of/Honours Theses (Linguistics)
- 21Linguistics, Department of/Mental Lexicon 2018
- 19Linguistics, Department of/Research Materials (Linguistics)
- 41Tucker, Benjamin V.
- 25Benjamin V. Tucker
- 21Matthew C. Kelley
- 14Newman, John
- 8Filip Nenadić
- 8Paradis, J.
- 21phonetics
- 13spoken word recognition
- 10Massive Auditory Lexical Decision
- 10psycholinguistics
- 8Phonetics
- 8acoustics
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2001
We explore the usage of the cardinal English posture verbs sit, stand, and lie relying on a number of corpora of English with a view towards establishing quantitative and qualitative differences for these search items across relatively small and relatively large corpora. Frequencies of these...
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Evaluating nêhiyawêtân: A computer assisted language learning (CALL) application for Plains Cree
Download2016
nêhiyawêtân, a computer assisted language learning (CALL) application for Plains Cree was evaluated. User reactions and behaviours were analysed using heuristic and co-operative evaluation methods. Feedback of heritage learners and other university students on the user interface were compared....
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Exploring intralexical meaning: Semantic neighbourhood and transparency effects on the reading of compound words
Download2019-03-26
Katherine R. Matchett, Lori Buchanan
This exploratory archival analysis investigates the relationships probabilistic co-occurrence measures of semantic association and semantic richness have with subjective measures of semantic transparency in English compound words. We also examine their correlations with behavioural measures....
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2000
Weeber, M., Baayen, R.H., Vos, R.
In a medical information extraction system, we use common word association techniques to extract side-effect-related terms. Many of these terms have a frequency of less than five. Standard word-association-based applications disregard the lowest-frequency words, and hence disregard useful...
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2019-03-25
Alma Luz Rodríguez-Lázaro, Natalia Arias-Trejo, Armando Q. Angulo-Chavira, Alina Signoret Dorcasberro
Lexical access has been suggested by Huettig and McQueen [4] to show cascade processing when auditory and visual information are presented to native speakers. The aim of this study was to determine whether cascade processing in Spanish-English bilinguals in a Mexican university is similar to that...
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2019-03-14
Skye J. Anderson, Jonathan A. Geary
We report on a visual masked priming study that tests whether English verbs are primed by their consonant graphemes in isolation (e.g. whether grw primes GROW) and whether priming for such prime-target pairs differs for regular versus irregular verbs (e.g. walk/ed vs. grow/grew, respectively). We...
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How acoustic distinctiveness affects spoken word recognition: A pilot study
2018-09-01
In the present study, I propose an acoustically-based alternative to phonological neighborhood density. Phonological neighborhood density has been used in many studies as an approximate quantification of lexical competition during spoken word recognition. However, phonological neighborhood...
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2017-01-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
A number of speech perception studies have been carried out to investigate how we process audio signals containing real words. However, comparatively fewer studies have been conducted looking at how listeners process audio signals containing phonotactically legal pseudowords. Some traditional...
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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....