Reduplication is common, but analogous reversal processes are rare, even though reversal, which involves nested rather than crossed dependencies, is less complex on the Chomsky hierarchy. We hypothesize that the explanation is that repetitions can be recognized when they match and reactivate a stored trace in short-term memory, but recognizing a reversal requires rearranging the input in working memory before attempting to match it to the stored trace. Repetitions can thus be recognized, and repetition patterns learned, implicitly, whereas reversals require explicit, conscious awareness. To test these hypotheses, participants were trained to recognize either a reduplication or a syllable-reversal pattern, and then asked to state the rule. I...
Background: The ability to repeat polysyllabic nonwords such as ‘‘blonterstaping’’ has frequently be...
Original article can be found at : http://www.informaworld.com/ Copyright Informa / Taylor & Fra...
Accepted November 1, 2016Connectionist accounts of quasiregular domains, such as spelling–sound corr...
Reduplication is common, but analogous reversal processes are rare, even though reversal, which invo...
We report on an artificial language learning experiment testing the learnability of a typologically ...
We report on an artificial language learning experiment testing the learnability of a typologically ...
We report on an artificial language learning experiment testing the learnability of a typologically ...
Language learners encounter numerous opportunities to learn regularities, but need to decide which o...
Abstract Background Certain manipulations, such as testing oneself on newly learned word association...
Background Certain manipulations, such as testing oneself on newly learned word associations (recall...
Page and Norris [(2008). Is there a common mechanism underlying word-form learning and the Hebb repe...
from simple to complex • Reversal learning illustrates a very simple yet computationally challenging...
In a single large-scale study, we demonstrate that verbal sequence learning as studied using the cla...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Linguistics and Philosophy, 2007.In...
An ubiquitous phenomenon in psychology is the `repetition effect': a repeated stimulus is processed ...
Background: The ability to repeat polysyllabic nonwords such as ‘‘blonterstaping’’ has frequently be...
Original article can be found at : http://www.informaworld.com/ Copyright Informa / Taylor & Fra...
Accepted November 1, 2016Connectionist accounts of quasiregular domains, such as spelling–sound corr...
Reduplication is common, but analogous reversal processes are rare, even though reversal, which invo...
We report on an artificial language learning experiment testing the learnability of a typologically ...
We report on an artificial language learning experiment testing the learnability of a typologically ...
We report on an artificial language learning experiment testing the learnability of a typologically ...
Language learners encounter numerous opportunities to learn regularities, but need to decide which o...
Abstract Background Certain manipulations, such as testing oneself on newly learned word association...
Background Certain manipulations, such as testing oneself on newly learned word associations (recall...
Page and Norris [(2008). Is there a common mechanism underlying word-form learning and the Hebb repe...
from simple to complex • Reversal learning illustrates a very simple yet computationally challenging...
In a single large-scale study, we demonstrate that verbal sequence learning as studied using the cla...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Linguistics and Philosophy, 2007.In...
An ubiquitous phenomenon in psychology is the `repetition effect': a repeated stimulus is processed ...
Background: The ability to repeat polysyllabic nonwords such as ‘‘blonterstaping’’ has frequently be...
Original article can be found at : http://www.informaworld.com/ Copyright Informa / Taylor & Fra...
Accepted November 1, 2016Connectionist accounts of quasiregular domains, such as spelling–sound corr...