Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition 20 (4), 824–843) have suggested that the speed with which native speakers of a gender-marking language retrieve the grammatical gender of a noun from their mental lexicon may depend on the recency of earlier access to that same noun's gender, as the result of a mechanism that is dedicated to facilitate gender-marked anaphoric reference to recently introduced discourse entities. This hypothesis was tested in two picture naming experiments. Recent gender access did not facilitate the production of gender-marked adjective noun phrases (Experiment 1), nor that of gender-marked definite article noun phrases (Experimen...
<div><p>Spoken words carry linguistic and indexical information to listeners. Abstractionist models ...
Contains fulltext : 72851.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Two experiment...
Item does not contain fulltextOne of the core issues in research on the processing of grammatical ge...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
International audienceThe analysis of speech error corpora in various gender-marked languages has sh...
The paper reviews recent empirical evidence on the representation and processing of grammatical gend...
The present study investigated the effect of prior grammatical gender information provided by the pr...
This study investigated whether retrieval of a noun's grammatical gender benefits from having retrie...
Most current models of language production assume that information about gender is selected only in ...
Languages appear to differ in the way definite determiners are selected during noun phrase productio...
Comprehending spoken language entails more than accessing successive words in the mental lexicon. Wo...
Two experiments investigate whether native speakers of French can use a noun's phonological end...
In many languages, the production of noun phrases requires the selection of gender-marked elements l...
Two experiments investigate whether native speakers of French can use a noun’s phonological ending t...
This thesis reports on two picture-word interference experiments where I investigate the processes i...
<div><p>Spoken words carry linguistic and indexical information to listeners. Abstractionist models ...
Contains fulltext : 72851.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Two experiment...
Item does not contain fulltextOne of the core issues in research on the processing of grammatical ge...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
International audienceThe analysis of speech error corpora in various gender-marked languages has sh...
The paper reviews recent empirical evidence on the representation and processing of grammatical gend...
The present study investigated the effect of prior grammatical gender information provided by the pr...
This study investigated whether retrieval of a noun's grammatical gender benefits from having retrie...
Most current models of language production assume that information about gender is selected only in ...
Languages appear to differ in the way definite determiners are selected during noun phrase productio...
Comprehending spoken language entails more than accessing successive words in the mental lexicon. Wo...
Two experiments investigate whether native speakers of French can use a noun's phonological end...
In many languages, the production of noun phrases requires the selection of gender-marked elements l...
Two experiments investigate whether native speakers of French can use a noun’s phonological ending t...
This thesis reports on two picture-word interference experiments where I investigate the processes i...
<div><p>Spoken words carry linguistic and indexical information to listeners. Abstractionist models ...
Contains fulltext : 72851.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Two experiment...
Item does not contain fulltextOne of the core issues in research on the processing of grammatical ge...