Published: 08 July 2021The examination of how words are learned can offer valuable insights into the nature of lexical representations. For example, a common assessment of novel word learning is based on its ability to interfere with other words; given that words are known to compete with each other (Luce and Pisoni, 1998; Dahan et al., 2001), we can use the capacity of a novel word to interfere with the activation of other lexical representations as a measure of the degree to which it is integrated into the mental lexicon (Leach and Samuel, 2007). This measure allows us to assess novel word learning in L1 or L2, but also the degree to which representations from the two lexica interact with each other (Marian and Spivey, 2003). Desp...
We report an eye movement experiment that investigates the effects of collocation strength and conte...
For more than a decade, studies on second language (L2) lexicalization patterns of motion events hav...
First-language research suggests that new words, after initial episodic-memory encoding, are consoli...
Published: 08 July 2021The examination of how words are learned can offer valuable insights into the...
This study considers one of the cognitive mechanisms underlying the development of second language (...
The aim of the article is to review the findings of research into patterns of word associations in b...
It is an undisputed fact that learning – and remembering – new words is key in successful second lan...
This study investigates how inaccurate phoneme processing affects recognition of partially onset-ove...
It is an undisputed fact that learning – and remembering – new words is key in successful second lan...
It is an undisputed fact that learning – and remembering – new words is key in successful second lan...
The lexical and phonetic mapping of auditorily confusable L2 nonwords was examined by teaching L2 le...
We propose the fuzzy lexical representations (FLRs) hypothesis that regards fuzziness as a core prop...
L2 listening can involve the phantom activation of words which are not actually in the input. All sp...
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The original publication is available at http://www.tandfo...
Word meanings are not always parallel across languages, and second language (L2) learners often use ...
We report an eye movement experiment that investigates the effects of collocation strength and conte...
For more than a decade, studies on second language (L2) lexicalization patterns of motion events hav...
First-language research suggests that new words, after initial episodic-memory encoding, are consoli...
Published: 08 July 2021The examination of how words are learned can offer valuable insights into the...
This study considers one of the cognitive mechanisms underlying the development of second language (...
The aim of the article is to review the findings of research into patterns of word associations in b...
It is an undisputed fact that learning – and remembering – new words is key in successful second lan...
This study investigates how inaccurate phoneme processing affects recognition of partially onset-ove...
It is an undisputed fact that learning – and remembering – new words is key in successful second lan...
It is an undisputed fact that learning – and remembering – new words is key in successful second lan...
The lexical and phonetic mapping of auditorily confusable L2 nonwords was examined by teaching L2 le...
We propose the fuzzy lexical representations (FLRs) hypothesis that regards fuzziness as a core prop...
L2 listening can involve the phantom activation of words which are not actually in the input. All sp...
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The original publication is available at http://www.tandfo...
Word meanings are not always parallel across languages, and second language (L2) learners often use ...
We report an eye movement experiment that investigates the effects of collocation strength and conte...
For more than a decade, studies on second language (L2) lexicalization patterns of motion events hav...
First-language research suggests that new words, after initial episodic-memory encoding, are consoli...