نتایج جستجو برای: nonword repetition task

تعداد نتایج: 311276  

2004
C. Darren Piercey Nicole Rioux

During a lexical decision task, the mood congruent effect occurs when a participant responds more quickly and accurately to word items that are congruent with their current mood. The present study investigates the inconsistencies found for mood congruent effects in the lexical decision task literature. Previous studies that have successfully produced the mood congruent effect used a pseudohomop...

2005
J. Scott Payne Brenda M. Ross

Recently a number of quasi-experimental studies have investigated the potential of a crossmodality transfer of second language competency between real-time, conversational exchange via text and speech (Abrams, 2003; Beauvious, 1998; Kost, 2004; Payne & Whitney, 2002). Payne and Whitney employed Levelt's (1989) model of language production and concepts from working memory as a rationale for a hy...

Journal: :Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR 2006
Stephanie F Stokes Anita M-Y Wong Paul Fletcher Laurence B Leonard

PURPOSE Recent research suggests that nonword repetition (NWR) and sentence repetition (SR) tasks can be used to discriminate between children with SLI and their typically developing age-matched (TDAM) and younger (TDY) peers. METHOD Fourteen Cantonese-speaking children with SLI and 30 of their TDAM and TDY peers were compared on NWR and SR tasks. NWR of IN nonwords (CV combinations attested ...

Journal: :Human brain mapping 2006
Denise Klein Kate E Watkins Robert J Zatorre Brenda Milner

Learning a specific skill during childhood may partly determine the functional organization of the adult brain. This hypothesis led us to study brain activation patterns using positron emission tomography (PET), in which we compared word and nonword repetition in 10 right-handed native English-speakers (L1) who were proficient in their second language, French (L2), which was learned after the a...

Journal: :NeuroImage 2016
Pascale Tremblay Isabelle Deschamps Marco Baroni Uri Hasson

Many factors affect our ability to decode the speech signal, including its quality, the complexity of the elements that compose it, as well as their frequency of occurrence and co-occurrence in a language. Syllable frequency effects have been described in the behavioral literature, including facilitatory effects during speech production and inhibitory effects during word recognition, but the ne...

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