Four language production experiments examine how English speakers plan compound words during phonological encoding. The experiments tested production latencies in both delayed and online tasks for English noun-noun compounds (e.g., daytime), adjective-noun phrases (e.g., dark time), and monomorphemic words (e.g., denim). In delayed production, speech onset latencies reflect the total number of prosodic units in the target sentence. In online production, speech latencies reflect the size of the first prosodic unit. Compounds are metrically similar to adjective-noun phrases as they contain two lexical and two prosodic words. However, in Experiments 1 and 2, native English speakers treated the compounds as single prosodic units, indistinguisha...
Theories of language production are monolingual but the world is multilingual. In the domain of word...
How word production unfolds remains controversial. Serial models posit that phonological encoding be...
Many studies have shown that syntagmatic and paradigmatic aspects of morphological structure may hav...
Theories of phonological word formation (e.g. Selkirk 1980, 1986; Nespor & Vogel 1986; Lahiri &a...
Theories of phonological word formation (e.g. Selkirk 1980, 1986; Nespor & Vogel 1986; Lahiri &a...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
Following the earlier works of Booij (1985) and Nespor & Vogel (1986) I provide further evidence tha...
Following the earlier works of Booij (1985) and Nespor & Vogel (1986) I provide further evidence tha...
AbstractWheeldon and Lahiri (Journal of Memory and Language 37 (1997) 356) used a prepared speech pr...
Compounding, the creation of words by combining two or more words, has long been a topic of interest...
Listeners rely on prosodic cues to disambiguate syntactic structures. One such ambiguity arises from...
Wheeldon and Lahiri (Journal of Memory and Language 37 (1997) 356) used a prepared speech production...
AbstractWheeldon and Lahiri (Journal of Memory and Language 37 (1997) 356) used a prepared speech pr...
Do we say dog when we say hotdog? In five experiments using the implicit priming paradigm, we assess...
Theories of language production are monolingual but the world is multilingual. In the domain of word...
How word production unfolds remains controversial. Serial models posit that phonological encoding be...
Many studies have shown that syntagmatic and paradigmatic aspects of morphological structure may hav...
Theories of phonological word formation (e.g. Selkirk 1980, 1986; Nespor & Vogel 1986; Lahiri &a...
Theories of phonological word formation (e.g. Selkirk 1980, 1986; Nespor & Vogel 1986; Lahiri &a...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
Following the earlier works of Booij (1985) and Nespor & Vogel (1986) I provide further evidence tha...
Following the earlier works of Booij (1985) and Nespor & Vogel (1986) I provide further evidence tha...
AbstractWheeldon and Lahiri (Journal of Memory and Language 37 (1997) 356) used a prepared speech pr...
Compounding, the creation of words by combining two or more words, has long been a topic of interest...
Listeners rely on prosodic cues to disambiguate syntactic structures. One such ambiguity arises from...
Wheeldon and Lahiri (Journal of Memory and Language 37 (1997) 356) used a prepared speech production...
AbstractWheeldon and Lahiri (Journal of Memory and Language 37 (1997) 356) used a prepared speech pr...
Do we say dog when we say hotdog? In five experiments using the implicit priming paradigm, we assess...
Theories of language production are monolingual but the world is multilingual. In the domain of word...
How word production unfolds remains controversial. Serial models posit that phonological encoding be...
Many studies have shown that syntagmatic and paradigmatic aspects of morphological structure may hav...