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Lexical Access in Speech Production
2022The speed and ease with which we produce words has puzzled researchers for decades. Uttering a single word comprises a great number of mental operations like conceptual selection (‘choosing’ the concept we are about to name), lexical retrieval (selecting the correct, and grammatically specified lemma for that concept), phonological encoding (retrieving
Hartsuiker, Robert J.+4 more
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Voice Markers of Lexical Access in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease.
Current Alzheimer Research, 2018BACKGROUND Recent studies have identified the correlation between dementia and certain vocal features, such as voice and speech changes. Vocal features may act as early markers of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
J. J. Meilán+4 more
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Lexical access and inflectional morphology
Cognition, 1988Abstract This study investigated the hypothesis that lexical representations are stored in morphologically decomposed form. Three lexical decision experiments in which the morphological structure of nonword stimuli was varied are reported. Systematic effects of morphological structure on reaction time and error performance were obtained.
Alfonso Caramazza+2 more
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Effects of alcohol on lexical access
Psychopharmacology, 1988Two experiments investigated the effect of alcohol on retrieval of lexical information. In each, volunteers received alcohol (1 ml per kg body weight) in one session and no alcohol in another in counterbalanced order. Experiment 1 was a computerised version of the Mill Hill vocabulary test in which subjects were required to define words by making ...
Maylor, E. A.+2 more
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Models of Lexical Access and Morphological Processing
, 2017We differentiate between lexicon-based and learning-based models of lexical access and representation and describe how each accounts for morphological effects in early and late word recognition.
P. Milin, Eva Smolka, L. Feldman
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, 2015
There is general agreement that speed of lexical access is an essential component for successful communication and fluent language use. In vocabulary acquisition research the majority of studies have focused on the acquisition of the form and meaning of ...
A. Pellicer‐Sánchez
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There is general agreement that speed of lexical access is an essential component for successful communication and fluent language use. In vocabulary acquisition research the majority of studies have focused on the acquisition of the form and meaning of ...
A. Pellicer‐Sánchez
semanticscholar +1 more source
Lexical access in L2: Representational deficit or processing constraint?
, 2015Previous research on phonological priming in a Lexical Decision Task (LDT) has demonstrated that second language (L2) learners do not show inhibition typical for native (L1) speakers that results from lexical competition, but rather a reversed effect ...
Svetlana V. Cook, K. Gor
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Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1984
Three experiments investigated the impact of five lexical variables (instance dominance, category dominance, word frequency, word length in letters, and word length in syllables) on performance in three different tasks involving word recognition ...
D. Balota, J. Chumbley
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Three experiments investigated the impact of five lexical variables (instance dominance, category dominance, word frequency, word length in letters, and word length in syllables) on performance in three different tasks involving word recognition ...
D. Balota, J. Chumbley
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Lexical access in aphasic and nonaphasic speakers.
Psychology Review, 1997An interactive 2-step theory of lexical retrieval was applied to the picture-naming error patterns of aphasic and nonaphasic speakers. The theory uses spreading activation in a lexical network to accomplish the mapping between the conceptual ...
G. Dell+4 more
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REPETITION PRIMING AND FREQUENCY ATTENUATION IN LEXICAL ACCESS
, 1984Repetition priming effects in lexical decision tasks are stronger for low-frequency words than for high-frequency words. This frequency attenuation effect creates problems for frequency-ordered search models that assume a relatively stable frequency ...
K. Forster, Chris Davis
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