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Comparing the time courses of lexical processes in L1 and L2 word recognition: A lexical decision eye tracking study with Japanese-English bilinguals ...
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One Label or Two? Linguistic Influences on the Similarity Judgment of Objects between English and Japanese Speakers
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Visual trimorphemic compound recognition in a morphographic script ...
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Visual trimorphemic compound recognition in a morphographic script ...
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The time-course of lexical activation in Japanese morphographic word recognition: Evidence for a character-driven processing model
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Emergence of wordlikeness in the mental lexicon: Language, population, and task effects in visual word recognition ...
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Miwa, Koji. - : University of Alberta Libraries, 2013
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Emergence of wordlikeness in the mental lexicon: Language, population, and task effects in visual word recognition
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Miwa, Koji. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2013
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Abstract:
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy ; Abstract: Various aspects of our higher-level cognition affect the buttom-up information uptake in perception of objects, faces, and scenes. Such interplay between new information and existing information in our memory can be seen also in rapid visual word recognition. Lexical processing architectures proposed to date, however, have been based mostly on studies with specific characteristics: those investigating monolingual English speakers reading English words, with a lexical decision task demand, and with response times as the primary dependent variable (Libben & Jarema, 2002). Phenomena consistently observed across different linguistic characteristics, individuals, and tasks must surely reflect the core of human language processes (i.e. functional overlap). In this dissertation, I investigated consequences of testing different language, population, and task on visual word recognition processes in three studies: primed Japanese kanji lexical decision with Japanese monolinguals (Chapter 2), eye-tracking Japanese kanji lexical decision with Japanese monolinguals (Chapter 3), and eye-tracking English lexical decision with Japanese-English bilinguals, who possess knowledge of orthographically different languages (Chapter 4). The three studies collectively show that language-specific properties, individual differences, and variable task demands, by themselves, do not result in completely different pictures with respect to how wordlikeness emerges in visual word recognition.
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Keyword:
Bilingual processing; Eye-tracking; Lexical decision; Mixed-effects modeling; Morphological processing; Visual word recognition
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URL: https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/e80775c1-23c2-45b1-b55f-6821cdf8419f http://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.31587 https://doi.org/10.7939/R31C1TQ15
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Emergence of wordlikeness in the mental lexicon: Language, population, and task effects in visual word recognition
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Miwa, Koji. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2013
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