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Generalization from newly learned words reveals structural properties of the human reading system
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Is the scope of phonological planning constrained by the syntactical role of the utterance constituents?
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In: Dumay, Nicolas; Damian, Markus F.; Perez, Miguel A.; & Stadthagen-Gonzales, Hans. (2009). Is the scope of phonological planning constrained by the syntactical role of the utterance constituents?. Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society, 31(31). Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5610w5r6 (2009)
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Is the scope of phonological planning constrained by the syntactical role of the utterance constituents?
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If syllables were classification units in speech perception, auditory priming would show it.
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Sleep-associated changes in the mental representation of spoken words.
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Effects of phoneme repetition in spoken utterance generation.
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Time pressure and phonological advance planning in spoken production.
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Reading spoken words: Orthographic effects in auditory priming
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The role of acoustic-phonetic cues in lexical segmentation: Studies in the French language
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Do words go to sleep? Exploring consolidation of spoken forms through direct and indirect measures
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