Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior
Evidence for multiple stages in the processing of ambiguous words in syntactic contexts
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The extended present: an informational context for perception
2021, Acta PsychologicaThe glottal stop between segmental and suprasegmental processing: The case of Maltese
2019, Journal of Memory and LanguageCitation Excerpt :This view is also in line with models that assume a relatively strong division in the relevant brain structures that process the segmental and prosodic aspects of speech (Giraud & Poeppel, 2012). Furthermore, this late effect of analysing the prosodic structure (as a higher-order linguistic structure) implies that lexical access takes place at multiple stages, comparable to the influence of syntactic information, which also comes into effect relatively late in spoken-word recognition (Swinney, 1979; Tanenhaus, Leiman, & Seidenberg, 1979). A similar late effect of context has recently been reported by Viebahn and Luce (2018), who found that non-canonical forms such as winner for winter are recognized better when presented in a casual-speech context.
VASTNESS AS AN EMBODIED REPRESENTATION OF EXISTENTIAL CONCEPTS
2024, Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion
This paper is partially based on a master's thesis by the second author directed by the first author. We thank Daniel Rourke, David Schell, and Debra Senytka for valuable advice on the manuscript.