منابع مشابه
Cross-modal noise compensation in audiovisual words
Perceiving linguistic input is vital for human functioning, but the process is complicated by the fact that the incoming signal is often degraded. However, humans can compensate for unimodal noise by relying on simultaneous sensory input from another modality. Here, we investigated noise-compensation for spoken and printed words in two experiments. In the first behavioral experiment, we observe...
متن کاملHearing words helps seeing words: A cross-modal word repetition effect
Watching a speaker say words benefits subsequent auditory recognition of the same words. In this study, we tested whether hearing words also facilitates subsequent phonological processing from visual speech, and if so, whether speaker repetition influences the magnitude of this word repetition priming. We used long-term cross-modal repetition priming as a means to investigate the underlying lex...
متن کاملMeaning Matters: Senses of Words are More Informative than Words for Cross-domain Sentiment Analysis
Getting labeled data in each domain is always an expensive and a time consuming task. Hence, cross-domain sentiment analysis has emerged as a demanding research area where a labeled source domain facilitates classifier for an unlabeled target domain. However, cross-domain sentiment analysis is still a challenging task because of the differences across domains. A word which is used with positive...
متن کاملCross-dimensional Mappings in Sound Symbolic Foreign Words
Sound symbolism– non-arbitrary correspondences between the sound of a word and its meaning– exists cross-linguistically and facilitates listeners’ ability to infer the meaning of foreign words. However, the specificity of these mappings remains unclear. The present study investigated whether sound symbolic properties correspond only to a specific meaning domain or to other semantic dimensions a...
متن کاملCross-Modal Fusion: Context Effects in Lexical Words
The study focuses on the response of participants to audiovisual presentations of talking heads, and examines the effect of noise and temporal misalignment of channels in English monosyllabic words. The results show that McGurk fusion of phonetic segments is sensitive to the linguistic context of a segment: coda consonants elicit fusion more frequently than onset consonants and short vowels eli...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: BMJ
سال: 1994
ISSN: 0959-8138,1468-5833
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.309.6970.1737