Zobrazeno 1 - 8
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pro vyhledávání: '"Dianne C. Bradley"'
Publikováno v:
Applied Psycholinguistics. 16:59-81
The segmentation strategies used by native and non-native listeners of French were examined in two phoneme-monitoring experiments which required the subjects to detect the presence of word-initial /t/ in potential liaison phrases (e.g.,excellent tabl
Publikováno v:
Cortex. 30:469-478
Mild language production difficulties, particularly in confrontation naming, have been documented previously in patients with left temporal lobe epilepsy (LTLE). These difficulties, however, do not seem to be reflected in the conversational speech of
Publikováno v:
Language and Cognitive Processes. 8:197-233
A series of monitoring studies is reported, in replication of the cross-language research of Cutler, Mehler, Norris and Segui (1983; 1986), which found evidence of language-specific perceptual routines. Monolingual speakers of Spanish and English det
Publikováno v:
Psychological Research. 53:53-61
This paper examines the evidence for an access representation based on the initial part of the word. A temporal separation technique, which presents test words in two parts, was used, and varied as to whether the first part included two, three, or fo
Publikováno v:
Language and Cognitive Processes. 5:203-236
We argue that in the delayed pronunciation task, articulatory fluency effects are unambiguously identified only when cues to respond arrive clearly after the completion of both lexical access and motor-code assembly processes. On this basis, five exp
Autor:
Dianne C. Bradley, Merrill F. Garrett
Publikováno v:
Neuropsychologia. 21(2)
The distinction between closed and open class words--of interest in the first instance because of claims about the support of structural analysis during comprehension--has its reflection in word recognition. For normal speakers, performances over the
Autor:
Kenneth I. Forster, Dianne C. Bradley
Publikováno v:
Cognition. 25(1-2)
There is a view that the fundamental processes involved in word recognition might somehow be different for speech and print. We argue that this view is unjustified, and that the models of lexical access developed for the written form are also appropr
Publikováno v:
The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. 28(2)
Many species have difficulty in discriminating between mirror-image stimuli, especially those about a vertical axis, and when identificatory rather than purely perceptual processes are involved. Various theories are reviewed. In two experiments invol