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1
Gender and dominance in action: World view and emotional affect in language processing and use
Marrville, Caelan. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2017
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2
ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE
In: ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/c1/32/Front_Psychol_2012_Mar_16_3_57.tar.gz (2012)
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3
ON PHONETIC IDENTIFICATION IN YOUNGER AND OLDER LISTENERS
In: http://www.mcgill.ca/files/coglab/abada_baum_titone_2008.pdf (2008)
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4
Simulating frontotemporal pathways involved in lexical ambiguity resolution
In: http://csjarchive.cogsci.rpi.edu/Proceedings/2005/docs/p2178.pdf (2005)
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5
Simulating frontotemporal pathways involved in lexical ambiguity resolution
In: http://www.psych.unito.it/csc/cogsci05/frame/poster/1/f848-thivierge.pdf (2005)
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6
Idiom processing in schizophrenia: Literal implausibility saves the day for idiom priming
In: http://www.mcgill.ca/files/coglab/titone_etal_2002.pdf (2002)
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7
Contextual insensitivity in schizophrenic language processing: evidence from lexical ambiguity
In: http://www.mcgill.ca/files/coglab/titone_etal_2000.pdf (2000)
Abstract: The authors investigated whether contextual failures in schizophrenia are due to deficits in the detection of context or the inhibition of contextually irrelevant information. Eighteen schizophrenia patients and 24 nonpsychiatric controls were tested via a cross-modal semantic priming task. Participants heard sentences containing homonyms and made lexical decisions about visual targets related to the homonyms' dominant or subordinate meanings. When sentences moderately biased subordinate meanings (e.g., the animal enclosure meaning of pen), schizophrenia patients howed priming of dominant argets (e.g., paper) and subordinate targets (e.g., pig). In contrast, controls showed priming only of subordinate targets. When contexts trongly biased subordinate meanings, both groups showed priming only of subordinate targets. The results suggest hat inhibitory deficits rather than context detection deficits underlie contextual failures in schizophrenia. One of the most interesting areas of cognitive function is the ability to contextually adjust behavior. If context is to be used effectively, relevant material must be appcehended and maintained in memory, and irrelevant material or impulses that may normally produce adaptive functioning must be suppressed. Although a general account of contextual processing is applicable to many cognitive domains, the domain of language is ideal for understand-ing its components. Many elements of language are ambiguous (e.g., words such as palm tropical vegetation or the surface of one's hand). Thus, one may place different sources of contextual constraint into conflict (e.g., palm in an immediate context hat supports its less frequent or subordinate interpretation) and ob-serve the ensuing behavior of an intact or impaired cognitive system. There are many reports of the disordered use of context in the language behavior of schizophrenia patients (Cameron, 1938;
URL: http://www.mcgill.ca/files/coglab/titone_etal_2000.pdf
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.596.6930
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BRIEF REPORTS Making Sense of Word Senses: The Comprehension of Polysemy Depends on Sense Overlap
In: http://www.mcgill.ca/files/coglab/klep_titone_romero2008-1.pdf
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JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE 37, 463–480 (1997) ARTICLE NO. ML972535 Similarity Mapping in Spoken Word Recognition
In: http://www.mcgill.ca/files/coglab/connineetal1997.pdf
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ARTICLE NO. BL981998 Hemispheric Differences in Context Sensitivity During Lexical Ambiguity Resolution
In: http://www.mcgill.ca/files/coglab/Titone1998.pdf
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