The extent to which a symbolic time–series (a sequence of sounds or letters) is a typical word of a language, referred to as WORDLIKENESS, has been shown to have effects in speech perception and production, reading proficiency, lexical development and lexical access, short–term and long–term verbal memory. Two quantitative models have been suggested to account for these effects: serial phonotactic probabilities (the likelihood for a given symbolic sequence to appear in the lexicon) and lexical density (the extent to which other words can be obtained from a target word by changing, deleting or inserting one or more symbols in the target). The two measures are highly correlated and thus easy to be confounded in measuring their effects in lexi...
We report an experiment exploring the extent to which the process of lexical selection in speech pro...
Lexical decision task in an event-related potential experiment was used in order to determine the or...
All words of the languages we know are stored in the mental lexicon. Psycholinguistic models describ...
The extent to which a symbolic time–series (a sequence of sounds or letters) is a typical word of a ...
The extent to which a symbolic time–series (a sequence of sounds or letters) is a typical word of a ...
How word production unfolds remains controversial. Serial models posit that phonological encoding be...
Wordlikeness, the extent to which a sound sequence is typical of words in a language, affects langua...
The lexicon is the store of words in long-term memory. Any attempt at modelling lexical competence m...
According to certain theories of language production, lexical access to a content word consists of t...
Many current psycholinguistic theories view the mental lexicon as a listing of (only) unpredictable ...
We present the Bayesian Information-Theoretical (BIT) model of lexical processing: A mathematical mo...
In spite of considerable converging evidence of the role of inflectional paradigms in word acquisiti...
Over the last several years, both theoretical and empirical approaches to lexical knowledge and enco...
The time course of spoken word recognition depends largely on the frequencies of a word and its comp...
Considerable evidence has accrued on the role of paradigms as both theoretical and cognitive structu...
We report an experiment exploring the extent to which the process of lexical selection in speech pro...
Lexical decision task in an event-related potential experiment was used in order to determine the or...
All words of the languages we know are stored in the mental lexicon. Psycholinguistic models describ...
The extent to which a symbolic time–series (a sequence of sounds or letters) is a typical word of a ...
The extent to which a symbolic time–series (a sequence of sounds or letters) is a typical word of a ...
How word production unfolds remains controversial. Serial models posit that phonological encoding be...
Wordlikeness, the extent to which a sound sequence is typical of words in a language, affects langua...
The lexicon is the store of words in long-term memory. Any attempt at modelling lexical competence m...
According to certain theories of language production, lexical access to a content word consists of t...
Many current psycholinguistic theories view the mental lexicon as a listing of (only) unpredictable ...
We present the Bayesian Information-Theoretical (BIT) model of lexical processing: A mathematical mo...
In spite of considerable converging evidence of the role of inflectional paradigms in word acquisiti...
Over the last several years, both theoretical and empirical approaches to lexical knowledge and enco...
The time course of spoken word recognition depends largely on the frequencies of a word and its comp...
Considerable evidence has accrued on the role of paradigms as both theoretical and cognitive structu...
We report an experiment exploring the extent to which the process of lexical selection in speech pro...
Lexical decision task in an event-related potential experiment was used in order to determine the or...
All words of the languages we know are stored in the mental lexicon. Psycholinguistic models describ...