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Yukian-Siouan Lexical Similarities
International Journal of American Linguistics, 19630. The small Yukian linguistic family of California comprises four languages in two divisions, one consisting of Wappo which is territorially separated from the remaining division (Yuki, Coast Yuki, Huchnom).2 Since Powell's 1891 classification3 Yukian has been recognized as a distinct group without clear external relationships. In 1906 Kroeber pointed
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Interpretable Semantic Textual Similarity Using Lexical and Cosine Similarity
2018Transforming information in a digital way modifies the people views and their daily functioning. Social media is a key platform where people express their views regarding any event and it also plays an important role in daily activities. Digital marketing is an example of such digital transformation of information.
Goutam Majumder +2 more
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Talker voice and similarity affect lexical neighborhoods
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2000Words that are similar to a syllable can influence listeners perception of phonemes in the syllable. Known as the lexical neighborhood effect, this has been shown to be robust, but vary in magnitude across talkers. In previous studies [L. Zimack and J. Sawusch, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 107, 2918 (2000)], series of nonword syllables were tested in two voices.
Liza K. Zimack +4 more
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Do Magnitude Estimation and Lexical Decision Tap Similar Processes?
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1998Young adults ( n = 54 for Exp. 1, n = 50 for Exp. 2) and elderly adults (the same n = 40 in each experiment) participated in studies that required nonspeeded magnitude estimation scaling in response to words that varied in frequency and number of meanings.
F R, Ferraro +5 more
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Extracting Local Web Communities Using Lexical Similarity
2010The World Wide Web contains rich textual contents that are interconnected via complex hyperlinks. Most studies on web community extraction only focus on graph structures. Consequently, web communities are discovered purely in terms of explicit link information without considering textual properties of web pages.
Xianchao Zhang, Wen Xu, Wenxin Liang
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Using Standardized Lexical Semantic Knowledge to Measure Similarity
2014The issue of sentence semantic similarity is important and essential to many applications of Natural Language Processing. This issue was treated in some frameworks dealing with the similarity between short texts especially with the similarity between sentence pairs. However, the semantic component was paradoxically weak in the proposed methods.
Wafa Wali +2 more
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Adding phonetic similarity data to a lexical database
Language Resources and Evaluation, 2008As part of a project to construct an interactive program which would encourage children to play with language by building jokes, we developed a lexical database, starting from WordNet. To the existing information about part of speech, synonymy, hyponymy, etc., we have added phonetic representations and phonetic similarity ratings for pairs of words ...
Manurung, Ruli +5 more
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Frequency and neighborhood effects on lexical access: Lexical similarity or orthographic redundancy?
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1992Five experiments investigated the effects of word frequency, neighborhood size, and bigram frequency on lexical decision and word-naming ...
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Short Text Computing Based on Lexical Similarity Model
2019Short text similarity deals with determining the closeness of two text mean the same thing by lexical or semantic. Various short text similarity approaches have been proposed which are based on lexical matching, semantic knowledge background or combining models. Lexical based model does not capture the actual meaning behind the words. However, semantic
Arifah Che Alhadi +4 more
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Lexical similarity and speech production: Neighborhoods for nonwords
Lingua, 2012Abstract Lexical similarity has been shown to play a role in speech production (as in speech perception). In production, words with many phonologically similar neighbors, i.e., those that are phonologically similar to a large number of other words, are produced with more hyperarticulated vowels than words with fewer neighbors ( Wright, 1997 , Munson
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