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Famous talker effects in spoken word recognition
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2013Previous work has demonstrated that talker-specific representations affect spoken word recognition relatively late during processing. However, participants in these studies were listening to unfamiliar talkers. In the present research, we used a long-term repetition-priming paradigm and a speeded-shadowing task and presented listeners with famous ...
Alisa M, Maibauer +3 more
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Spoken Idiom Recognition: Meaning Retrieval and Word Expectancy
Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2005This study investigates recognition of spoken idioms occurring in neutral contexts. Experiment 1 showed that both predictable and non-predictable idiom meanings are available at string offset. Yet, only predictable idiom meanings are active halfway through a string and remain active after the string's literal conclusion.
TABOSSI P, FANARI, RACHELE, WOLF K.
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Machine Recognition of Spoken Words
1960Publisher Summary The mechanical recognition of speech sounds is a field in which computers are now being used. This chapter discusses the present state of speech recognition by machines. Speech recognition machines must work with the acoustic wave as input, and must therefore perform some or all of the processes normally the province of the human ...
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The core question that spoken word recognition research attempts to address is: How does a phonological word-form activate the corresponding lexical representation that is stored in the mental lexicon? While speech perception research (see the separate Oxford Bibliographies in Linguistics article “Speech Perception”) focuses on the mapping of highly ...
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Influence of word familiarity on spoken word recognition
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2006Spoken word recognition is affected by many factors including sound pressure level, signal-to-noise ratio, word familiarity, word frequency, and phoneme sequence plausibility. Of these factors, word familiarity is assumed to have a strong effect but has received little attention.
Shigeaki Amano +3 more
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Spoken Word Recognition of Chinese Words in Continuous Speech
Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2014The present study examined the role of positional probability of syllables played in recognition of spoken word in continuous Cantonese speech. Because some sounds occur more frequently at the beginning position or ending position of Cantonese syllables than the others, so these kinds of probabilistic information of syllables may cue the locations of ...
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Cognitive processes underlying spoken word recognition during soft speech
Cognition, 2020Kristi Hendrickson +2 more
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Dynamic programming algorithm optimization for spoken word recognition
, 1978Hiroaki Sakoe
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The Psycholinguistics of Spoken Word Recognition
1999The process of mapping acoustic-phonetic level input to a lexical representation is multi-faceted. Models of spoken word recognition provide a variety of processing architectures and make different assumption(s) regarding the unit(s) of representation used in the exchange of information from signal-to-word and the nature of information flow through the
Cynthia M. Connine, Thomas Deelman
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