Results 151 to 160 of about 62,683 (302)
ABSTRACT This study examines how Taiwanese members of parliament (MPs) deploy self‐referring expressions—specifically, the formal first‐person singular běnxí—to negotiate their institutional standing and project political power. By operationalizing access to objective power using the margin of victory (MoV) as one possible proxy, the research shows ...
Tsung‐Lun Alan Wan
wiley +1 more source
Syllable-frequency effect in visual word recognition: evidence of sequential-type processing
El efecto de frecuencia silábica se examinó en tres experimentos sobre lectura de palabras en español. Se emplearon palabras y pseudopalabras de dos sílabas en las que se manipuló la frecuencia posicional tanto de la primera como de la ...
Manuel de Vega +2 more
doaj
Syllable Frequency and Stress Priming Interact in Reading Italian Aloud.
In current theories of word reading the structure and operations of the phonological buffer are quite underspecified. We investigated this issue by running a reading aloud experiment in Italian. We adopted a priming paradigm, with three-syllabic words as primes and targets and we jointly manipulated two effects ascribed to the stage of phonological and
Sulpizio, Simone, Job, Remo
openaire +4 more sources
ABSTRACT This article applies a social model of historical dialect evolution in 19th‐century Britain to the analysis of sociophonetic data. Our aim is to assess where new dialect formation is likely to occur, and where it is not. Using recordings from 27 speakers, we first analyse coda rhoticity in north Lancashire, UK. The speakers were born 1890–1917
Claire Nance, Malika Mahamdi
wiley +1 more source
How Flexible Are Grammars Past Puberty? The Case of Relative Clauses in Turkish‐American Returnees
Abstract How flexible are grammars after puberty? To answer this, we test returnees: heritage speakers (HS) born in an immigration context who returned to their homeland in later years. If returnees are targetlike, then language is still malleable after puberty; in contrast, if maturational effects are in play, postpuberty returnees will show ...
Aylin Coşkun Kunduz, Silvina Montrul
wiley +1 more source
Data from the Paper Entitled "Application of a Bayesian Approach for Exploring the Impact of Syllable Frequency in Handwritten Picture Naming". [PDF]
Perret C, Solier C.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract The study examined the mediation model of socioeconomic status (SES) and executive function (EF) on reading abilities in Chinese (as first language, L1) and English (as second language, L2) in 260 native Cantonese‐speaking students (146 boys) from Hong Kong local primary schools with the mean age at 111.3 months (range = 98–132 months).
Dan Lin +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This study examined second language vocabulary processing and learning in reading only (RO) versus reading while listening (RWL). 119 English learners read or read‐while‐listening to a story embedded with 25 pseudowords, 10 times each, and had their eye movements tracked.
Jonathan Malone +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract A key debate in second language acquisition research revolves around the relative significance of explicit and implicit learning conditions in grammar learning. However, little is known about the potential of learners’ extramural (i.e., out‐of‐class) language use in fostering implicit and/or automatized knowledge as compared to explicit ...
Alexandra Schurz (she/her)
wiley +1 more source
Vocal Complexity Constrains the Dear Enemy Effect: A Comparative Study of Coal Tits and Green-Backed Tits. [PDF]
Zhao L, Zhang F, Liu J, Liang W.
europepmc +1 more source

