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III: Analyses and results for study 1: Estimating the effect of linguistic distance on vocabulary development
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I: Introduction
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Vocabulary of 2-year-olds learning English and an additional language: norms and effects of linguistic distance
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Vocabulary of 2-year-olds learning English and an additional language: Norms and effects of linguistic distance
Rowland, CF; Sullivan, E; Krott, A. - : Wiley, 2018
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III: ANALYSES AND RESULTS FOR STUDY 1: ESTIMATING THE EFFECT OF LINGUISTIC DISTANCE ON VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT.
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I: INTRODUCTION.
Sambrook, TD; Floccia, C; Cattani, A. - : Wiley, 2018
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Electrophysiological study of action-affordance priming between object names.
Feven-Parsons, IM; Goslin, J. - : Elsevier, 2018
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Vocabulary of 2-Year-Olds Learning English and an Additional Language: Norms and Effects of Linguistic Distance
Plunkett, K; Goslin, J; Gervain, J. - : Wiley, 2018
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Comparing phoneme frequency, age of acquisition, and loss in aphasia: Implications for phonological universals
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10
British English infants segment words only with exaggerated infant-directed speech stimuli
In: Cognition, March 01, 2016 (2016)
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British English infants segment words only with exaggerated infant-directed speech stimuli.
Abstract: The word segmentation paradigm originally designed by Jusczyk and Aslin (1995) has been widely used to examine how infants from the age of 7.5 months can extract novel words from continuous speech. Here we report a series of 13 studies conducted independently in two British laboratories, showing that British English-learning infants aged 8-10.5 months fail to show evidence of word segmentation when tested in this paradigm. In only one study did we find evidence of word segmentation at 10.5 months, when we used an exaggerated infant-directed speech style. We discuss the impact of variations in infant-directed style within and across languages in the course of language acquisition.
Keyword: British English; Child Language; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant-directed-speech; Infants; Language; Language Development; Male; Replication; Speech; Speech Perception; United Kingdom; Word segmentation
URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2015.12.004
http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/9943
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12
PhonItalia: a phonological lexicon for Italian.
Galluzzi, C; Romani, C; Goslin, J. - : United States, 2014
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13
Differential processing of consonants and vowels in the auditory modality: A cross-linguistic study
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14
English-learning one- to two-year-olds do not show a consonant bias in word learning.
Delle Luche, C; Poltrock, S; Goslin, J. - : England, 2014
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15
Utterance-Final Lengthening Is Predictive of Infants' Discrimination of English Accents
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16
Syllable effects in a fragment-detection task in italian listeners.
Kolinsky, R; Floccia, C; Morais, JJD. - : Switzerland, 2012
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17
Parent or community: where do 20-month-olds exposed to two accents acquire their representation of words?
Delle Luche, C; Butler, J; Goslin, J. - : Netherlands, 2012
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18
Infants’ Discrimination of Familiar and Unfamiliar Accents in Speech
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Lexical stress and phonetic processing in word learning in 20- to 24-month-old English-learning children
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20
Regional and foreign accent processing in English: can listeners adapt?
Floccia, C; Ellis, L; Butler, J. - : United States, 2009
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