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Non-Māori-speaking New Zealanders have a Māori proto-lexicon
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From categories to gradience: Auto-coding sociophonetic variation with random forests
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 11, No 1 (2020); 6 ; 1868-6354 (2020)
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Phonological and Morphological Effects in the Acceptability of Pseudowords
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From categories to gradience: Auto-coding sociophonetic variation with random forests
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Non-Māori-speaking New Zealanders have a Māori proto-lexicon
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Word frequency effects in sound change as a consequence of perceptual asymmetries: An exemplar-based model.
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Abstract social categories facilitate access to socially skewed words ; PLOS ONE
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 9, No 1 (2018); 11 ; 1868-6354 (2018)
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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Changing word usage predicts changing word durations in New Zealand English
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Social Salience Discriminates Learnability of Contextual Cues in an Artificial Language
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The emergence of linguistic structure in an online iterated learning task
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Cancer beliefs and patient activation in a diverse, multi-lingual primary care sample
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Participants conform to humans but not to humanoid robots in an English past tense formation task
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Abstract:
In this article, we discuss the results of an experiment designed to test the boundaries of linguistic imitation in a group setting. While most prior work has focused on convergence in either sound structure or syntax, we investigate whether speakers’ choices in verb morphology are influenced by others. The experiment uses an Asch-type peer pressure methodology. Participants give responses to target stimuli in a verbal and a visual task in a group of human peers, a group of robots, or alone. These results demonstrate that morphological conformity occurs, but that it is socially constrained—it happens with human peers but not with robot peers. This supports a view of linguistic convergence as a deeply social process. The level of linguistic conformity displayed by individuals is related to their degree of conformity in nonlinguistic tasks, suggesting that there are individual propensities toward peer imitation that transcend modalities.
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URL: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/114037/ https://doi.org/10.1177/0261927X15584682
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From Newcastle MOUTH to Aussie ears: Australians' perceptual assimilation and adaptation for Newcastle UK vowels
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