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A multimodal corpus of speech to infant and adult listeners
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43 |
Perception of stressed vs unstressed vowels : language-specific and general patterns
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44 |
Phonologically determined asymmetries in vocabulary structure across languages
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Rapid recognition at 10 months as a predictor of language development
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Listening to REAL second language
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Cutler, Anne (R12329). - : U.S., American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages, 2011
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Abstract:
Never forget: L2 speech is someone else’s L1 speech. That means that real L2 speech is like real L1 speech: often unlike how it’s written. English-speakers say I’ll post my letter to Grandpa, and 99 times out of 100 it comes out with post pronounced pos’, and Grandpa pronounced Grampa. The deletion of the sound /t/ in post my, or the assimilation of one sound to the following one, are “casual-speech processes”. Some such processes, including these two, are very common across languages including Slavic languages, of course.
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Keyword:
second language recognition; speech perception; XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: http://handle.westernsydney.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:41067 http://www.aatseel.org/100111/pdf/aatseeloct11nl.pdf
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50 |
L1 knowledge and the perception of casual speech processes in L2
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Brain potentials for word segmentation at seven months predict later language development
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Ability to segment words from speech as a precursor of later language development : insights from electrophysiological responses in the infant brain
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