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Young learners’ processing of multimodal input and its impact on reading comprehension: an eye-tracking study
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Is All Formulaic Language Created Equal? Unpacking the Processing Advantage for Different Types of Formulaic Sequences ...
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Is All Formulaic Language Created Equal? Unpacking the Processing Advantage for Different Types of Formulaic Sequences ...
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Carrol-and-Conklin-SUPPLEMENTARY-MATERIALS – Supplemental material for Is All Formulaic Language Created Equal? Unpacking the Processing Advantage for Different Types of Formulaic Sequences ...
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Carrol-and-Conklin-SUPPLEMENTARY-MATERIALS – Supplemental material for Is All Formulaic Language Created Equal? Unpacking the Processing Advantage for Different Types of Formulaic Sequences ...
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Literary stylistics, authorial intention and the scientific study of literature: a critical overview
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Consumer behaviour and ICSS: exploring how consumers respond to Information, Connection and Signposting Services
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Representation and processing of multi-word expressions in the brain
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Cross language priming extends to formulaic units: evidence from eye-tracking suggests that this idea “has legs”
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Using eye-tracking in applied linguistics and second language research
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Found in translation: the influence of the L1 on the reading of idioms in a L2
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The role of verbal and pictorial information in multimodal incidental acquisition of foreign language vocabulary
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Processing punctuation and word changes in different editions of prose fiction
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Making sense of the Sense Model: translation priming with Japanese-English bilinguals
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Eye-tracking multi-word units: some methodological questions
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Abstract:
Eye-tracking in linguistics has focused mainly on reading at the level of the word or sentence. In this paper we discuss how the phenomenon of formulaic language might best be examined using this methodology. Formulaic language is fundamentally multi-word in nature, therefore an approach to eye-tracking that considers the “word” as the basic unit of analysis may require re-evaluation. We review the existing literature on single word and sentence processing, and also those studies that have used eye-tracking as a way of investigating formulaic language to date. We discuss how eye-tracking might elucidate the “added extra” processing advantage for formulaic language. We conclude with some suggestions about the best way to utilise eye-tracking within this sub-field of linguistic investigation.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.16910/jemr.7.5.5 http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28745/ http://www.jemr.org/online/7/5/5
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The impact of Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (RSVP) on reading by nonnative speakers
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