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The relationship between sentence comprehension and lexical-semantic retuning
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The relationship between sentence comprehension and lexical-semantic retuning ...
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The Neural Time Course of Semantic Ambiguity Resolution in Speech Comprehension. ...
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The neural time course of semantic ambiguity resolution in speech comprehension
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In: J Cogn Neurosci (2020)
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Pupil Dilation Is Sensitive to Semantic Ambiguity and Acoustic Degradation
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In: Brain and Mind Institute Researchers' Publications (2020)
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Contextual priming of word meanings is stabilized over sleep
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A Database of Dutch–English Cognates, Interlingual Homographs and Translation Equivalents
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Towards a distributed connectionist account of cognates and interlingual homographs: evidence from semantic relatedness tasks
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The neural time course of semantic ambiguity resolution in speech comprehension
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Listeners and readers generalize their experience with word meanings across modalities
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Retuning of lexical-semantic representations: Repetition and spacing effects in word-meaning priming. ...
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Retuning of lexical-semantic representations: Repetition and spacing effects in word-meaning priming.
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Retuning of lexical-semantic representations: Repetition and spacing effects in word-meaning priming
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Accent modulates access to word meaning: Evidence for a speaker-model account of spoken word recognition. ...
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Abstract:
Speech carries accent information relevant to determining the speaker's linguistic and social background. A series of web-based experiments demonstrate that accent cues can modulate access to word meaning. In Experiments 1-3, British participants were more likely to retrieve the American dominant meaning (e.g., hat meaning of "bonnet") in a word association task if they heard the words in an American than a British accent. In addition, results from a speeded semantic decision task (Experiment 4) and sentence comprehension task (Experiment 5) confirm that accent modulates on-line meaning retrieval such that comprehension of ambiguous words is easier when the relevant word meaning is dominant in the speaker's dialect. Critically, neutral-accent speech items, created by morphing British- and American-accented recordings, were interpreted in a similar way to accented words when embedded in a context of accented words (Experiment 2). This finding indicates that listeners do not use accent to guide meaning ...
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Keyword:
Accent; Adult; Comprehension; Dialect; Female; Humans; Male; Recognition Psychology; Semantic ambiguity; Speech; Speech Perception; Spoken word recognition; United Kingdom; United States
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URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/290004 https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.37231
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Task-based and resting-state fMRI reveal compensatory network changes following damage to left inferior frontal gyrus
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Listeners and readers generalise their experience with word meanings across modalities
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Accent modulates access to word meaning: Evidence for a speaker-model account of spoken word recognition
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Accent modulates access to word meaning: Evidence for a speaker-model account of spoken word recognition.
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