This paper tests the hypothesis that the lexicon structure responds to two opposed pressures. First, the pressure for isomorphic representations means that words that occur in similar contexts tend to sound similar. Second, the pressure for disambiguation needs a way to distinguish the similar-sounding words that occur in similar contexts. This corpus-based study finds that while some aspects of the phonological organization of the lexicon respond to the first pressure, others respond to the second. The results presented here support the idea of a complex lexicon able to find solutions and adapt its structure to disparate, often conflicting pressures
Over the past decades it has become generally acknowledged that lexicon and grammar are inseparably ...
Semantic networks are often used to represent the meaning of a word in the mental lexicon. To constr...
Contains fulltext : 56014.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A perceptual l...
This paper tests the hypothesis that the lexicon structure responds to two opposed pressures. First,...
This chapter examines some psycholinguistic issues raised in the study of language understanding. Qu...
Dimensions of similarity in the mental lexicon During language production planning, multiple candida...
Recent psycholinguistic research has demonstrated that our knowledge of words includes fine-grained ...
ABSTRACT The number of words a native speaker of a language knows is incredibly vast. However, this...
Words contain multitudes. This multiplicity of meanings raises two key questions, both of which this...
Recent evidence suggests that cognitive pressures associated with language acquisition and use could...
The present auditory lexical-decision study sought to determine the extent to which\ud predictable a...
Phonological variation of any sort (determined by speech styles, phrasing, or morphophonological rul...
The experiments reported here investigated how lexical information is used during word and sentence ...
The mental lexicon stores words and information about words. The lexicon is seen by many researchers...
Abstract- The paper discussed the concept of mental lexicon or mental dictionary and some other stud...
Over the past decades it has become generally acknowledged that lexicon and grammar are inseparably ...
Semantic networks are often used to represent the meaning of a word in the mental lexicon. To constr...
Contains fulltext : 56014.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A perceptual l...
This paper tests the hypothesis that the lexicon structure responds to two opposed pressures. First,...
This chapter examines some psycholinguistic issues raised in the study of language understanding. Qu...
Dimensions of similarity in the mental lexicon During language production planning, multiple candida...
Recent psycholinguistic research has demonstrated that our knowledge of words includes fine-grained ...
ABSTRACT The number of words a native speaker of a language knows is incredibly vast. However, this...
Words contain multitudes. This multiplicity of meanings raises two key questions, both of which this...
Recent evidence suggests that cognitive pressures associated with language acquisition and use could...
The present auditory lexical-decision study sought to determine the extent to which\ud predictable a...
Phonological variation of any sort (determined by speech styles, phrasing, or morphophonological rul...
The experiments reported here investigated how lexical information is used during word and sentence ...
The mental lexicon stores words and information about words. The lexicon is seen by many researchers...
Abstract- The paper discussed the concept of mental lexicon or mental dictionary and some other stud...
Over the past decades it has become generally acknowledged that lexicon and grammar are inseparably ...
Semantic networks are often used to represent the meaning of a word in the mental lexicon. To constr...
Contains fulltext : 56014.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A perceptual l...