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1
[In Press] Cross-clause planning in Nungon (Papua New Guinea) : eye-tracking evidence
Sarvasy, Hannah (R19492); Morgan, Adam M.; Yu, Jenny (S33569). - : U.S., Springer New York, 2022
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2
Navigating accent variation : a developmental perspective
Johnson, Elizabeth K.; van Heugten, Marieke (R20597); Buckler, Helen. - : U.S., Annual Reviews, 2022
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3
The use of predictive fall models for older adults receiving aged care, using routinely collected electronic health record data : a systematic review
Seaman, Karla; Ludlow, Kristiana; Wabe, Nasir. - : U.K., BioMed Central, 2022
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4
Music perception abilities and ambiguous word learning : is there cross-domain transfer in nonmusicians?
Smit, Eline A. (R20266); Milne, Andrew J. (R17639); Escudero, Paola (R16636). - : Switzerland, Frontiers Research Foundation, 2022
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5
Drift in a popular metal oxide sensor dataset reveals limitations for gas classification benchmarks
Dennler, Nik; Rastogi, Shavika (S36339); Fonollosa, Jordi. - : Netherlands, Elsevier, 2022
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6
Physical activity interventions among culturally and linguistically diverse populations : a systematic review
El Masri, Aymen (R20042); Kolt, Gregory S. (R11602); George, Emma S. (R17418). - : U.K., Routledge, 2022
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7
Oral cancer risk behaviours of Indian immigrants in Australia : a qualitative study
Saraswat, Nidhi (S34706); Prabhu, Neeta; Pillay, Rona (R17010). - : Richmond, Vic., Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia, 2022
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8
Early critical thinking in a Mandarin-speaking child : an exploratory case study
Shao, Xuemei (S35928); Qi, Ruying (R10565); Kawaguchi, Satomi (R7941). - : Switzerland, MDPI, 2022
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9
No evidence for language benefits in infant relational learning
Anderson, Erin; Chang, Yin-Juei; Hespos, Susan J. (R20509). - : U.K., Elsevier, 2022
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10
Hearing loss prevalence and years lived with disability, 1990–2019 : findings from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019
Haile, Lydia M.; Steinmetz, Jaimie; Abdoli, Amir. - : U.K., Lancet Publishing Group, 2021
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11
Instructing Malaysian children with HFASD in English as a second language
Di Biase, Bruno (R7581); Sabri, A’ina A.; Mohamed Salleh, Rabiah T. A.. - : Malaysia, International Islamic University Malaysia, 2021
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12
Enhanced forensic speaker verification performance using the ICA-EBM algorithm under noisy and reverberant environments
Al‑Ali, Ahmed Kamil Hasan; Chandran, Vinod; Naik, Ganesh R. (R19010). - : Germany, Springer, 2021
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13
Japanese perceptual epenthesis is modulated by transitional probability
Kilpatrick, Alexander J.; Kawahara, Shigeto; Bundgaard-Nielsen, Rikke L. (R14172). - : U.K., Sage Publications, 2021
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14
Babies detect when the timing is right : evidence from event-related potentials to a contingent mother-infant conversation
Lam-Cassettari, Christa (R17152); Peter, Varghese (R17407); Antoniou, Mark (R17772). - : U.K., Elsevier, 2021
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15
Perceptual assimilation of regionally accented Mandarin lexical tones by native Beijing Mandarin listeners
Li, Yanping (S34467); Best, Catherine T. (R11322); Tyler, Michael D. (R11374); Burnham, Denis K. (R7357). - : U.S., AIP Publishing, 2021
Abstract: Pronunciations of Beijing Mandarin are those of Standard Mandarin (hereafter Mandarin), which developed from the Beijing dialect. Native speakers of other regional dialects in China learn Mandarin as an early second language, and produce its four lexical tones (level, rising, dipping, and falling) with regional accents. This study investigated how native Beijing Mandarin listeners perceptually assimilate regionally accented Mandarin lexical tones. Native Beijing Mandarin listeners (M age = 21.31 years) were recruited to identify 16 Mandarin real words (4 consonant-vowel syllables: ba, di, du, gu × 4 tones) produced by speakers of Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou dialects and to rate how similar the productions were to the Beijing accent. Stimuli were blocked by syllable, maintaining minimal contrasts between the tones. The Beijing listeners identified Mandarin words in all three accents with high accuracy (>90%), indicating that they reliably assimilated the regionally accented tones into the four Mandarin tones. However, their reaction times were longer and their rating scores were lower for the regional accents than for the Beijing stimuli. This indicates that while Mandarin listeners are sensitive to accent differences in Mandarin lexical tones, they show phonological constancy across regional accents, which is crucial for tone categorization and discrimination of tone contrasts.
Keyword: XXXXXX - Unknown
URL: https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0008406
https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:62075
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16
Vocal interaction during rhythmic joint action stabilizes interpersonal coordination and individual movement timing
Miyata, Kohei; Varlet, Manuel (R17601); Miura, Akito. - : U.S., American Psychological Association, 2021
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17
Constructing Hungarian 'good-will ambassadors' : the collaborative soft power efforts of Hungary's Balassi Institute and the Hungarian community in Australia
Kantek, Julia (S34284); Veljanova, Irena (R16833); Onnudottir, Helena (R14906). - : U.K., Routledge, 2021
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18
[In Press] The Italian Roots in Australian Soil (IRIAS) multilingual speech corpus : speech variation in two generations of Italo-Australians
Galata, Vincenzo; Avesani, Cinzia; Best, Catherine T. (R11322). - : Netherlands, Springer Netherlands, 2021
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19
Lexical and morphological development : a case study of Malay English bilingual first language acquisition
Mohamed Salleh, Rabiah T. A.; Di Biase, Bruno (R7581); Kawaguchi, Satomi (R7941). - : Poland, Uniwersytet Warszawski, 2021
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20
Clinical practices of speech-language pathologists working with 12- to 16-year olds in Australia
Shelton, Nichola; Munro, Natalie; Keep, Melanie. - : U.K., Taylor & Francis, 2021
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