In spoken word recognition, high-frequency words with few neighbors and less frequently occurring minimal pair neighbors (lexically easy words) are recognized more accurately than low-frequency words with many and more frequently occurring neighbors (lexically hard words). Bradlow and Pisoni (1999) found a larger easy hard word effect for non-native than native speakers of English. The present study extends this work by specifically comparing word recognition by non-native listeners with either earlier or later ages of immersion in an English-speaking environment to that of native English speakers. Listeners heard six lists of 24 words, each composed of 12 lexically easy and 12 lexically hard words in an open-set word identification task. W...
This research addresses the effect of word characteristics on memory. Previous research has shown th...
Listeners frequently recognize spoken words in the presence of background noise. Previous research h...
<div><p>This study investigated how speech recognition in noise is affected by language proficiency ...
In spoken word recognition, high-frequency words with few neighbors and less frequently occurring mi...
There is ample evidence that recognising words in a non-native language is more difficult than in a ...
Native listeners benefit from talker familiarity in recognition memory and word identification, espe...
This article investigates 2 questions: (1) does the presence of background noise lead to a different...
Spoken word recognition involves integrating acoustic/auditory information extracted from the signal...
There is ample evidence that both native and non-native listeners deal with speech variation by quic...
Objective: The main objective was to investigate the effect of linguistic abilities (lexical-access ...
This study assesses the usefulness of Marsien-Wilson’s (1989, 1987; Marsien Wilson & Welsh, 1978) c...
Purpose: To investigate the effects of vocabulary, working memory, age, semantic context, and sign...
This study investigated whether Japanese listeners learning English employ two types of lexical info...
Adult listeners more accurately identify talkers speaking a known language than a foreign language (...
The accurate perception of spoken English is influenced by many variables, including the listener\u2...
This research addresses the effect of word characteristics on memory. Previous research has shown th...
Listeners frequently recognize spoken words in the presence of background noise. Previous research h...
<div><p>This study investigated how speech recognition in noise is affected by language proficiency ...
In spoken word recognition, high-frequency words with few neighbors and less frequently occurring mi...
There is ample evidence that recognising words in a non-native language is more difficult than in a ...
Native listeners benefit from talker familiarity in recognition memory and word identification, espe...
This article investigates 2 questions: (1) does the presence of background noise lead to a different...
Spoken word recognition involves integrating acoustic/auditory information extracted from the signal...
There is ample evidence that both native and non-native listeners deal with speech variation by quic...
Objective: The main objective was to investigate the effect of linguistic abilities (lexical-access ...
This study assesses the usefulness of Marsien-Wilson’s (1989, 1987; Marsien Wilson & Welsh, 1978) c...
Purpose: To investigate the effects of vocabulary, working memory, age, semantic context, and sign...
This study investigated whether Japanese listeners learning English employ two types of lexical info...
Adult listeners more accurately identify talkers speaking a known language than a foreign language (...
The accurate perception of spoken English is influenced by many variables, including the listener\u2...
This research addresses the effect of word characteristics on memory. Previous research has shown th...
Listeners frequently recognize spoken words in the presence of background noise. Previous research h...
<div><p>This study investigated how speech recognition in noise is affected by language proficiency ...