Previous research has suggested that integration of novel words into lexical competition benefits from a consolidation delay containing a period of sleep (Dumay & Gaskell, 2007). However, a recent study argued that learning novel words via a relatively implicit Hebb repetition task leads to later lexical integration independently of sleep (Szmalec, Page, & Duyck, 2012). It is not clear whether this different time course of lexical integration is a consequence of the learning method chosen, as opposed to other between study differences. Four experiments directly compared the learning of novel words using explicit and implicit methods, namely phoneme monitoring on isolated tokens vs. Hebb repetition of syllable sequences. The impact of the le...
First-language research suggests that new words, after initial episodic-memory encoding, are consoli...
Three experiments examined the time-course of talker-specificity and lexical competition effects dur...
© 2018 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an...
Previous research has suggested that integration of novel words into lexical competition benefits fr...
The Hebb repetition paradigm is a serial-order learning task in which participants recall sequences ...
New vocabulary is consolidated offline, particularly during sleep; however, the parameters that infl...
Evidence suggests that new vocabulary undergoes a period of strengthening and integration offline, p...
Although the acquisition of a novel word is apparently rapid, adult research suggests that integrati...
In four experiments we investigated the formation of novel word memories across modalities, using co...
Learning a new word involves integration with existing lexical knowledge. Previous work has shown th...
When a novel word is learned, its memory representation is thought to undergo a process of consolida...
Previous studies using direct forms of vocabulary instruction have shown that newly learned words ar...
In line with two-stage models of memory, it has been proposed that memory traces for newly learned w...
The possibility of fast mapping (FM) promoting rapid lexical integration challenges complementary sy...
This study clarifies the involvement of short- and long-term memory in novel word-form learning, usi...
First-language research suggests that new words, after initial episodic-memory encoding, are consoli...
Three experiments examined the time-course of talker-specificity and lexical competition effects dur...
© 2018 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an...
Previous research has suggested that integration of novel words into lexical competition benefits fr...
The Hebb repetition paradigm is a serial-order learning task in which participants recall sequences ...
New vocabulary is consolidated offline, particularly during sleep; however, the parameters that infl...
Evidence suggests that new vocabulary undergoes a period of strengthening and integration offline, p...
Although the acquisition of a novel word is apparently rapid, adult research suggests that integrati...
In four experiments we investigated the formation of novel word memories across modalities, using co...
Learning a new word involves integration with existing lexical knowledge. Previous work has shown th...
When a novel word is learned, its memory representation is thought to undergo a process of consolida...
Previous studies using direct forms of vocabulary instruction have shown that newly learned words ar...
In line with two-stage models of memory, it has been proposed that memory traces for newly learned w...
The possibility of fast mapping (FM) promoting rapid lexical integration challenges complementary sy...
This study clarifies the involvement of short- and long-term memory in novel word-form learning, usi...
First-language research suggests that new words, after initial episodic-memory encoding, are consoli...
Three experiments examined the time-course of talker-specificity and lexical competition effects dur...
© 2018 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an...