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1
Neural mechanisms for selectively tuning in to the target speaker in a naturalistic noisy situation
In: Dai, B; Chen, C; Long, Y; Zheng, L; Zhao, H; Bai, X; et al.(2018). Neural mechanisms for selectively tuning in to the target speaker in a naturalistic noisy situation. Nature Communications, 9(1). doi:10.1038/s41467-018-04819-z. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/05f36564 (2018)
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2
Effects of word frequency and visual complexity on eye movements of young and older Chinese readers
Zang, C.; Zhang, M.; Bai, X.. - : Taylor & Francis (Routledge): STM, 2016
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3
L2 Bridging descriptions: Second language acquisition from a ‘syntactic’ to ‘pragmatic’ language
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4
Positional character frequency and word spacing facilitate the acquisition of novel words during Chinese children’s reading
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5
Positional character frequency and word spacing facilitate the acquisition of novel words during Chinese children's reading
Liang, F.; Blythe, Hazel I.; Zang, C.. - : Taylor and Francis, 2015
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6
Parafoveal processing across different lexical constituents in Chinese reading
Abstract: We report a boundary paradigm eye movement experiment to investigate whether the linguistic category of a two character Chinese string affects how the second character of that string is processed in the parafovea during reading. We obtained clear preview effects in all conditions, but more importantly, found parafoveal-on-foveal effects whereby a nonsense preview of the second character influenced fixations on the first character. This effect occurred for monomorphemic words, but not for compound words or phrases. Also, in a word boundary demarcation experiment, we demonstrate that Chinese readers are not always consistent in their judgments of which characters in a sentence comprise words. We conclude that information regarding the combinatorial properties of characters in Chinese is used on-line to moderate the extent to which parafoveal characters are processed.
URL: https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/345925/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/345925/1/Cui%252C%2520Drieghe%252C%2520Yan%252C%2520Bai%252C%2520Chi%2520%2526%2520Liversedge%2520%25282013%2529.pdf
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7
Parafoveal processing across different lexical constituents in Chinese reading
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8
Inserting spaces into Chinese text helps readers to learn new words: an eye movement study
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9
Eye movements of second language learners when reading spaced and unspaced Chinese text
Shen, D.; Liversedge, Simon Paul; Tian, J.. - : American Psychological Association, 2012
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10
Inserting spaces into Chinese text helps readers to learn new words: an eye movement study
Blythe, Hazel I.; Liang, F.; Zang, C.. - : Elsevier, 2012
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