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Testing linguistic stress rules with listeners' perceptions

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1979
Stress patterns provide information about the wording, phrasal divisions, syntactic categories, and grammatical relations in English sentences. This study attempts to experimentally verify alternative stress rules published by linguists like Chomsky, Halle, Bresnan, Lakoff, and Bolinger.
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Hemispheric asymmetry for linguistic prosody: A study of stress perception in Croatian

Brain and Cognition, 2004
The aim of the study was to test for possible functional cerebral asymmetry in processing one segment of linguistic prosody, namely word stress, in Croatian. The test material consisted of eight tokens of the word pas under a falling accent, varying only in vowel duration between 119 and 185 ms, attached to the end of a frame sentence.
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Intergroup Threat and the Linguistic Intergroup Bias: A Stress Biomarker Study

Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 2018
This study investigates the physiological consequences of derogation. In the face of an ingroup threat, an opportunity to derogate the outgroup is associated with increases in salivary cortisol, a stress biomarker. These findings support the intergroup anxiety model, which suggests that following an anxiety-inducing threatening experience, outgroup ...
Sinthujaa Sampasivam   +3 more
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Word Prominence and Areal Linguistics

, 2017
The goal of this chapter is to present an overview of the consequences of language contact, with the understanding that linguistic areas arise through contact (Hickey 2010), focusing on word prominence (i.e. stress and pitchaccent).
H. Hulst   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Fluctuation and vagueness: breaks from univocity in Phenomenology and Cognitive Linguistics

, 2016
When phenomenology is compared to cognitive linguistics, it is basically by virtue of the importance the former generally grants to experience and to embodied cognition.
Simona Cresti
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Acculturative stress in Asian immigrants: The impact of social and linguistic factors

International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 2010
The purpose of this study was to investigate which linguistic and social constructs predict acculturative stress in a nationally representative sample of Asian immigrants and Asian Americans. The participants in this study were 2095 Asians who were recruited between May 2002 and November 2003 as part of the larger NLAAS survey.
Machelle D. Wilson, Kerstin Lueck
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The supraglottal articulation of prominence in English: Linguistic stress as localized hyperarticulation

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1995
The results of an articulatory investigation of the supraglottal correlates of linguistic prominence in English, and a proposal of a unified description of linguistic stress are reported. Three models of stress are evaluated: that prominence expands jaw movement, that stress expands an abstract articulatory scale involving the opening and closing of ...
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The reliability of ratings by linguistically untrained subjects in response to stress in speech

Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 1974
To determine the reliability with which untrained raters could identify stress in the speech of a single person, two forms of the same material, (1) speech broken into short utterances and (2) speech in its conversational context, were presented to 40 linguistically naive psychology students who were asked to underline those syllables that they ...
openaire   +3 more sources

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