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Functional and Anatomical Adaptations in Multilingual Language Users
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Semantic word integration in children with cochlear implants: electrophysiological evidence ...
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Semantic word integration in children with cochlear implants: electrophysiological evidence ...
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Effects of Age on American Sign Language Sentence Repetition
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In: Psychol Aging (2020)
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Cortical encoding of manual articulatory and linguistic features in American Sign Language
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In: Curr Biol (2020)
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A Novel EEG Paradigm to Simultaneously and Rapidly Assess the Functioning of Auditory and Visual Pathways
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A novel EEG paradigm to simultaneously and rapidly assess the functioning of auditory and visual pathways
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In: J Neurophysiol (2019)
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Putting underspecification in context: ERP evidence for sparse representations in morphophonological alternations
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Distinguishing underlying and surface variation patterns in speech perception ...
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Distinguishing underlying and surface variation patterns in speech perception ...
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Distinguishing underlying and surface variation patterns in speech perception ...
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Distinguishing underlying and surface variation patterns in speech perception
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Abstract:
This study examines the relationship between patterns of variation and speech perception using two English prefixes: ‘in-’/’im-’ and ‘un-’. In natural speech, ‘in-’ varies due to an underlying process of phonological assimilation, while ‘un-’ shows a pattern of surface variation, assimilating before labial stems. In a go/no-go lexical decision experiment, subjects were presented a set of ‘mispronounced’ stimuli in which the prefix nasal was altered (replacing [n] with [m], or vice versa), in addition to real words with unaltered prefixes. No significant differences between prefixes were found in responses to unaltered words. In mispronounced items, responses to ‘un-’ forms were faster and more accurate than to ‘in-’ forms, although a significant interaction mitigated this effect in labial contexts. These results suggest the regularity of variation patterns has consequences for the lexical specification of words, and argues against radical under-specification accounts which argue for a maximally sparse lexicon.
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Keyword:
Article
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/23273798.2017.1318213 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6424519/
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Putting underspecification in context: ERP evidence for sparse representations in morphophonological alternations
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Auditory and Visual Electrophysiology of Deaf Children with Cochlear Implants: Implications for Cross-modal Plasticity
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Embodiment and American Sign Language Exploring sensory-motor influences in the recognition of American Sign Language
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Deaf Readers’ Response to Syntactic Complexity: Evidence from Self-Paced Reading
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