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A developmental investigation of the first-letter advantage
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In: ISSN: 0022-0965 ; EISSN: 1096-0457 ; Journal of Experimental Child Psychology ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01477337 ; Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, Elsevier, 2016, 152, pp.161 - 172. ⟨10.1016/j.jecp.2016.07.016⟩ (2016)
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Producing written noun phrases in French
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In: ISSN: 1387-6732 ; Written Language and Literacy ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03160614 ; Written Language and Literacy, John Benjamins Publishing, 2015, 18 (1), pp.1-24. ⟨10.1075/wll.18.1.01mag⟩ (2015)
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Chinese Compound Processing in Sentences with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation
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Wang, Guangting. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2014
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Chinese Compound Processing in Sentences with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation
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Wang, Guangting. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2014
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Abstract:
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy ; Abstract: Due to the uniqueness of Chinese orthographic features and the pervasiveness of compounding in modern Chinese, psycholinguistic research in the past decades has shown great interest in the visual recognition of Chinese compound words. Models of compound processing make different predictions about whether compounds have whole-word representations, whether compound words and even characters are initially decomposed and recognized on the basis of their morphemic subunits, and at what point the meanings associated with these units come into play. Clearly, the debate is unresolved. The research presented in this thesis aims at contributing to this area of inquiry through a series of experiments addressing the reading of Chinese compounds. The present dissertation reports four naming experiments (with in all 12 sub-experiments) , three of which manipulated different situations in which Chinese compound words are read: one in which two constituent characters are presented on the same line, one in which they are split across two lines, and one in which the order of the constituents is reversed to form a semantically different word, and the fourth one extended compounding from compound words to compound characters. For each of these situations, the exposure duration in Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (RSVP) of the compound was either 100ms, 200ms, or 500ms. Subsequently, a stimulus potentially related to the compound was presented on the computer screen. Participants were asked to read this target word out loud. The naming latencies were recorded, and entered as response variable into a mixed-effects regression model with the lexical properties (such as frequency, character complexity and character family size) and experimental factors (exposure duration, presentation type) as predictors. In the first three experiments on compound word processing, significant effects of the frequency of the compound prime word were observed for the naming latencies to the target word for the shortest exposure duration (100 ms). Interestingly, the sign of the frequency effect depended on whether the target word was morphologically related or unrelated to the compound prime. Facilitation was present in the related condition, but inhibition in the unrelated condition, indicating that this frequency effect is semantic in nature. This pattern persisted even when the two constituent characters were split over two lines. Comparison of the results between short and longer RSVP presentation rates (i.e. 100ms versus 200ms and 500ms) showed that the compound frequency effect was subject to fast decay: it was present for a 100ms exposure duration, but absent for 200ms and 500ms exposure durations. This suggests the semantic priming effect is subject to fast decay in short-term memory (STM). Finally, we did not obtain any evidence that naming a component of a compound character or an unrelated character would be interpreted with reference to the meaning of the preceding prime compound character (Experiment 4), a finding that is very different from what emerged for two-character compound primes and single-character targets (Experiments 1, 2 and 3). This suggests that the components of single characters, read out loud after presentation of the prime sentence, are processed as semantically void, purely orthographic parts of characters, comparable to letters in English words. Taken together, my findings provide evidence for rapid access to the meanings of compounds read in sentential context, for fast decay of these meanings, and for the importance of contextual integration in short-term memory.
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Keyword:
Chinese compound; Processing in Sentences; Rapid Serial Visual Presentation
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URL: https://doi.org/10.7939/R33D4F https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/0e91c168-f39d-4d63-9ea0-dcfd8a79e994 http://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.39730
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Hemispheric asymmetries in word recognition as revealed by the orthographic uniqueness point effect
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The Representation of Abstract Words: Why Emotion Matters
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In: J EXP PSYCHOL GEN , 140 (1) 14 - 34. (2011) (2011)
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When ‘more’ in statistical learning means ‘less’ in language: individual differences in predictive processing of adjacent dependencies
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In: http://cnl.psych.cornell.edu/pubs/2010-mc-cogsci.pdf (2010)
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The Cross-Script Length Effect: Further Evidence Challenging PDP Models of Reading Aloud
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In: Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 35 (1) (2009)
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Noun and verb comprehension and production in bilingual individuals with anomic aphasia ...
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COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGY NEUROREPORT ‘Winner-take-all ’ competition among real and illusory words
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In: http://www.bu.edu/psych/faculty/charris/papers/Neuroreport_2006.pdf (2006)
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Electrophysiological evidence for serial sentence processing: a comparison between non-preferred and ungrammatical continuations
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Traitement en temps réel et modèle interactif de la compréhension orale A propos de travaux expérimentaux de Marslen-Wilson et Tyler
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Coste, Daniel. - : Paris : Université Paris VIII, 1985. : PERSÉE : Université de Lyon, CNRS & ENS de Lyon, 1985
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'Pseudo', A Macro-Based High Level Language for the PDP-11
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In: DTIC AND NTIS (1974)
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