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How sleeping minds decide: State-specific reconfigurations of lexical decision-making. [PDF]

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Xia T   +7 more
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Context effects in lexical processing

Cognition, 1987
Abstract This article examines the extent to which word recognition is influenced by lexical, syntactic, and semantic contexts in order to contrast predictions made by modular and interactive theories of the architecture of the language comprehension system.
M K, Tanenhaus, M M, Lucas
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Frequency in lexical processing

Aphasiology, 2016
ABSTRACTBackground: Frequency of occurrence is a strong predictor of lexical processing across modalities and experimental paradigms. However, frequency is part of a large set of collinear predictors including not only frequencies collected from different registers, but also a wide range of other lexical properties such as length, neighbourhood density,
R. Harald Baayen   +2 more
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Lexical processing in bilinguals

Second Language Research, 1995
In this article data from an auditory lexical decision experiment with English-Dutch bilinguals are compared with data from a similar experiment using visual lexical decision. The aim of the experiments was to investigate three factors that may play a role in lexical processing: level of proficiency in the second language, mode of presentation (visual
Bot, C.L.J. de   +4 more
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Processing correlates of lexical semantic complexity

Cognition, 2003
This paper explores how verb meanings that differ in semantic complexity are processed and represented. In particular, we compare eventive verbs, which denote causally structured events, with stative verbs, which denote facts without causal structure.
Silvia, Gennari, David, Poeppel
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Processing of lexical ambiguities in aphasia

Brain and Language, 1987
Wernicke's and Broca's aphasics performed a lexical decision task wherein they had to decide whether the third word of an auditorily presented triplet series of words was "real" or not. The first and third words of each triplet were related to one, both, or neither meaning of the second word which was semantically ambiguous.
W, Milberg, S E, Blumstein, B, Dworetzky
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