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41
THE COMPREHENSION OF ACOUSTICALLY REDUCED MORPHOLOGICALLY COMPLEX WORDS: THE ROLES OF DELETION, DURATION, AND FRQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE
In: http://www.icphs2007.de/conference/Papers/1091/1091.pdf
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42
LEXICAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN TUSCAN DIALECTS AND STANDARD ITALIAN: A SOCIOLINGUISTIC ANALYSIS USING GENERALIZED ADDITIVE MIXED MODELING
In: http://urd.let.rug.nl/nerbonne/papers/Wieling-etal-Language-2013.pdf
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43
Review TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences Vol.9 No.7 July 2005 Shifting paradigms: gradient structure in morphology
In: http://ling.ucsd.edu/~ackerman/Szuperkurszus/Hay_Baayen.pdf
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44
and irregularity in Dutch
In: http://www.ualberta.ca/~baayen/publications/tabaketal.pdf
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45
1 TITLE: Morphological effects in auditory word recognition: Evidence from Danish RUNNING HEAD: Morphological effects in Danish
In: http://pure.au.dk/portal/files/11598358/Balling_BaayenLCP.pdf
Abstract: In this study, we investigate the processing of morphologically complex words in Danish using auditory lexical decision. We document a second critical point in auditory comprehension in addition to the Uniqueness Point (UP), namely the point at which competing morphological continuation forms of the base cease to be compatible with the input, henceforth the Complex Uniqueness Point (CUP). Suffixed words with later CUP elicited longer response latencies. We also observed an interaction between suffix frequency and whole-word frequency. Both suffix and whole-word frequency were facilitatory, except for words for which both frequencies are high. For such words, we observed inhibition, and most clearly so for female compared to male participants. Finally, a comparison of complex with simple words revealed that, other things being equal, complex words have a processing advantage compared to simple words. We discuss the consequences of these findings for models of morphological processing. 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are grateful to Ocke-Schwen Bohn for helpful advice and discussion, to Lee Wurm for useful input on the UP-effects and to Jonathan Grainger and two anonymous reviewers for constructive comments on an earlier version of this paper. 4
URL: http://pure.au.dk/portal/files/11598358/Balling_BaayenLCP.pdf
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.566.1243
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46
JADT 2000: 5es Journées Internationales d’Analyse Statistique des Données Textuelles Mixture models for word frequency distributions
In: http://lexicometrica.univ-paris3.fr/jadt/jadt2000/pdf/12/12.pdf
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47
5 Data Mining at the Intersection of Psychology and Linguistics
In: http://www.ualberta.ca/~baayen/publications/Baayen4Corners.pdf
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48
Corpora and exemplars in phonology
In: http://www.ualberta.ca/~baayen/publications/ErnestusBaayenPhonHandbook2011.pdf
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49
Sidestepping the Combinatorial Explosion: An Explanation of n-gram Frequency Effects Based on Naive Discriminative Learning
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/BaayenHendrixRamscar2013.pdf
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50
BORDER EFFECTS AMONG CATALAN DIALECTS
In: http://urd.let.rug.nl/nerbonne/papers/Wieling-etal-2013-final-LeuvenStatisticsDays.pdf
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51
Quantitative Social Dialectology: Explaining Linguistic Variation Geographically and Socially
In: http://urd.let.rug.nl/nerbonne/papers/WielingNerbonneBaayen2011.pdf
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52
Published by: The Royal
In: http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/people/hayes/205/Readings/BaayenSchreuder2000RoyalSociety.pdf
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53
Native Language Influences on Word Recognition in a Second Language:
In: http://www.lextale.com/Resources/lehm2008.pdf
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54
Extracting the Lowest-Frequency Words: Pitfalls and Possibilities
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55
The Effects of Lexical Specialization on the Growth Curve of the Vocabulary
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Language comprehension as a multi‐label classification problem
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57
The Discriminative Lexicon: A Unified Computational Model for the Lexicon and Lexical Processing in Comprehension and Production Grounded Not in (De)Composition but in Linear Discriminative Learning
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