Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-frequency words change faster than low-frequency words in some cases, slower in other cases, and at the same rate in yet other cases? We argue that this puzzle can be answered by giving substantial weight to the role of the listener. We present an exemplar-based computational model of regular sound change in which the listener plays a large role, and we demonstrate that it generates sound changes with properties and word frequency effects seen in corpora. In particular, we consider the experimentally-supported assumption that high-frequency words may be more robustly recognized than low-frequency words in the face of acoustic ambiguity. We sho...
In speech-production, high-frequency words are more likely to be phonologically reduced than low-fre...
In 7 experiments the authors investigated the locus of word frequency effects in speech production. ...
In the present article, the effects of phonological neighborhood density and word frequency in spoke...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
The present study aims to isolate the locus of the frequency effect within the spoken word recogniti...
The claim that high-frequency words tend to undergo regular sound change faster than less frequent w...
The word frequency effect refers to the observation that high-frequency words are processed more eff...
The relationships between word frequency and various perceptual features have been used to study the...
The word frequency paradox refers to the finding that low frequency words are better recognized than...
In speech production, high-frequency words are more likely than low-frequency words to be phonologic...
This paper addresses the relationship between lexical frequency and sound change with a view to its ...
AbstractContemporary New Zealand English has distinctive pronunciations of three characteristic vowe...
Contemporary New Zealand English has distinctive pronunciations of three characteristic vowels. Did ...
In speech production, high-frequency words are more likely than low-frequency words to be phonolog-i...
In speech-production, high-frequency words are more likely to be phonologically reduced than low-fre...
In 7 experiments the authors investigated the locus of word frequency effects in speech production. ...
In the present article, the effects of phonological neighborhood density and word frequency in spoke...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
The present study aims to isolate the locus of the frequency effect within the spoken word recogniti...
The claim that high-frequency words tend to undergo regular sound change faster than less frequent w...
The word frequency effect refers to the observation that high-frequency words are processed more eff...
The relationships between word frequency and various perceptual features have been used to study the...
The word frequency paradox refers to the finding that low frequency words are better recognized than...
In speech production, high-frequency words are more likely than low-frequency words to be phonologic...
This paper addresses the relationship between lexical frequency and sound change with a view to its ...
AbstractContemporary New Zealand English has distinctive pronunciations of three characteristic vowe...
Contemporary New Zealand English has distinctive pronunciations of three characteristic vowels. Did ...
In speech production, high-frequency words are more likely than low-frequency words to be phonolog-i...
In speech-production, high-frequency words are more likely to be phonologically reduced than low-fre...
In 7 experiments the authors investigated the locus of word frequency effects in speech production. ...
In the present article, the effects of phonological neighborhood density and word frequency in spoke...