The present study investigates the effect of the explicit teaching of prosodic features on developing word recognition skills with interpreter trainees. Two groups of student interpreters were composed. All were native speakers of Farsi who studied English translation and interpreting at the BA level at the State University of Arak, Iran. Participants were categorized into two groups at random, but with equal division between genders (9 female and 9 male students in each group). No significant differences in English language skills (TOEFL scores) could be established between the groups. Participants took a pretest of word recognition skill before starting the program. The control group received exercises in listening comprehension, while ...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of computer assisted prosody training (CAPT...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of computer assisted prosody training (CAPT...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of nativeness vs. intelligibility approach ...
This study investigates the effect of explicit teaching of prosodic features on developing listeni...
This study investigates the effect of prosody awareness training on the performance of Farsi-English...
The present study investigates the effect of explicit teaching of prosody on developing speaking...
This study investigates the effect of prosodic feature awareness training on the quality of interpre...
This study investigates the effect of explicit vs. implicit prosody teaching on developing listening...
In the present study, three groups of interpreter trainees were formed, two experimental groups, i.e...
The present study investigates the prosody training benefits for interpreter trainees in perception ...
This study investigates the effect of explicit vs. implicit prosody teaching on the quality of conse...
Consecutive interpreting allows two persons who do not understand each other’s l...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of the Nativeness vs. Intelligibility appro...
The present study investigates the effect of the explicit teaching of segmentals vs. prosody on the ...
Establishing comprehensive rules and guidelines for speech production and teaching of prosody is dif...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of computer assisted prosody training (CAPT...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of computer assisted prosody training (CAPT...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of nativeness vs. intelligibility approach ...
This study investigates the effect of explicit teaching of prosodic features on developing listeni...
This study investigates the effect of prosody awareness training on the performance of Farsi-English...
The present study investigates the effect of explicit teaching of prosody on developing speaking...
This study investigates the effect of prosodic feature awareness training on the quality of interpre...
This study investigates the effect of explicit vs. implicit prosody teaching on developing listening...
In the present study, three groups of interpreter trainees were formed, two experimental groups, i.e...
The present study investigates the prosody training benefits for interpreter trainees in perception ...
This study investigates the effect of explicit vs. implicit prosody teaching on the quality of conse...
Consecutive interpreting allows two persons who do not understand each other’s l...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of the Nativeness vs. Intelligibility appro...
The present study investigates the effect of the explicit teaching of segmentals vs. prosody on the ...
Establishing comprehensive rules and guidelines for speech production and teaching of prosody is dif...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of computer assisted prosody training (CAPT...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of computer assisted prosody training (CAPT...
The present study investigates the relative contribution of nativeness vs. intelligibility approach ...