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Original Articles

Speech reductions change the dynamics of competition during spoken word recognition

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Pages 539-571 | Received 01 Dec 2009, Accepted 10 Jan 2011, Published online: 17 Aug 2011

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Kimberley Mulder, Lucas Wloch, Lou Boves, Louis ten Bosch & Mirjam Ernestus. (2022) Cognate status modulates the comprehension of isolated reduced forms. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 37:5, pages 576-614.
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Hideko Teruya & Vsevolod Kapatsinski. (2019) Deciding to look: revisiting the linking hypothesis for spoken word recognition in the visual world. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 34:7, pages 861-880.
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Holger Mitterer & Eva Reinisch. (2017) Surface forms trump underlying representations in functional generalisations in speech perception: the case of German devoiced stops. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 32:9, pages 1133-1147.
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Anne Pycha. (2017) False memories for varying and non-varying words in American English. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 32:2, pages 205-220.
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Stephanie Huette. (2016) Putting context into context: sources of context and a proposed mechanism for linguistic negation. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 31:8, pages 1000-1014.
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Susanne Brouwer, Holger Mitterer & Falk Huettig. (2012) Can hearing puter activate pupil? Phonological competition and the processing of reduced spoken words in spontaneous conversations. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 65:11, pages 2193-2220.
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Articles from other publishers (35)

Natasha Warner. (2023) Advancements of phonetics in the 21st century: Theoretical and empirical issues of spoken word recognition in phonetic research. Journal of Phonetics 101, pages 101275.
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Bob McMurray, McCall E. Sarrett, Samantha Chiu, Alexis K. Black, Alice Wang, Rebecca Canale & Richard N. Aslin. (2022) Decoding the temporal dynamics of spoken word and nonword processing from EEG. NeuroImage 260, pages 119457.
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Natasha Warner, Dan Brenner, Benjamin V. Tucker & Mirjam Ernestus. (2022) Native Listeners’ Use of Information in Parsing Ambiguous Casual Speech. Brain Sciences 12:7, pages 930.
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Terrin N. Tamati, Victoria A. Sevich, Emily M. Clausing & Aaron C. Moberly. (2022) Lexical Effects on the Perceived Clarity of Noise-Vocoded Speech in Younger and Older Listeners. Frontiers in Psychology 13.
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Natasha Warner. 2021. The Cambridge Handbook of Phonetics. The Cambridge Handbook of Phonetics 133 156 .
Holger Mitterer, Sahyang Kim & Taehong Cho. (2021) Glottal stops do not constrain lexical access as do oral stops. PLOS ONE 16:11, pages e0259573.
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Benjamin V. Tucker & Mirjam Ernestus. 2021. Polylogues on The Mental Lexicon. Polylogues on The Mental Lexicon 77 108 .
Conor T. Mclennan & Sara Incera. 2021. The Handbook of Speech Perception. The Handbook of Speech Perception 206 238 .
Polina Drozdova, Roeland van Hout, Sven Mattys & Odette Scharenborg. (2021) The effect of intermittent noise on lexically-guided perceptual learning in native and non-native listening. Speech Communication 126, pages 61-70.
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Kristi Hendrickson, Jessica Spinelli & Elizabeth Walker. (2020) Cognitive processes underlying spoken word recognition during soft speech. Cognition 198, pages 104196.
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Natasha Warner. (2019) Reduced speech: All is variability. WIREs Cognitive Science 10:4.
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Odette Scharenborg & Marjolein van Os. (2019) Why listening in background noise is harder in a non-native language than in a native language: A review. Speech Communication 108, pages 53-64.
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Melissa M. Baese-Berk, Laura C. Dilley, Molly J. Henry, Louis Vinke & Elina Banzina. (2018) Not just a function of function words: Distal speech rate influences perception of prosodically weak syllables. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 81:2, pages 571-589.
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Terrin N. Tamati, Esther JanseDeniz Başkent. (2019) Perceptual Discrimination of Speaking Style Under Cochlear Implant Simulation. Ear & Hearing 40:1, pages 63-76.
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Kristin J. Van Engen & Drew J. McLaughlin. (2018) Eyes and ears: Using eye tracking and pupillometry to understand challenges to speech recognition. Hearing Research 369, pages 56-66.
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Malte C. Viebahn & Paul A. Luce. (2018) Increased exposure and phonetic context help listeners recognize allophonic variants. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 80:6, pages 1539-1558.
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Angela Cooper & Ann Bradlow. (2018) Training-induced pattern-specific phonetic adjustments by first and second language listeners. Journal of Phonetics 68, pages 32-49.
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Ashley Farris-Trimble & Bob McMurray. (2018) Morpho-phonological regularities influence the dynamics of real-time word recognition: Evidence from artificial language learning. Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology 9:1, pages 2.
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Xin Xie & Emily B. Myers. (2017) Learning a talker or learning an accent: Acoustic similarity constrains generalization of foreign accent adaptation to new talkers. Journal of Memory and Language 97, pages 30-46.
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Bob McMurray, Ashley Farris-Trimble & Hannah Rigler. (2017) Waiting for lexical access: Cochlear implants or severely degraded input lead listeners to process speech less incrementally. Cognition 169, pages 147-164.
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Malte C. Viebahn, Mirjam Ernestus & James M. McQueen. (2017) Speaking Style Influences the Brain's Electrophysiological Response to Grammatical Errors in Speech Comprehension. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 29:7, pages 1132-1146.
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Benjamin V. Tucker & Mirjam Ernestus. (2016) Why we need to investigate casual speech to truly understand language production, processing and the mental lexicon. The Mental Lexicon 11:3, pages 375-400.
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EVA REINISCH. (2015) Speaker-specific processing and local context information: The case of speaking rate. Applied Psycholinguistics 37:6, pages 1397-1415.
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Satsuki Nakai & James M. Scobbie. (2016) The VOT Category Boundary in Word-Initial Stops: Counter-Evidence Against Rate Normalization in English Spontaneous Speech. Laboratory Phonology 7:1.
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Susanne Brouwer & Ann R. Bradlow. (2015) The Temporal Dynamics of Spoken Word Recognition in Adverse Listening Conditions. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 45:5, pages 1151-1160.
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Christina S. Kim, Christine Gunlogson, Michael K. Tanenhaus & Jeffrey T. Runner. (2015) Context-driven expectations about focus alternatives. Cognition 139, pages 28-49.
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Anne Cutler. 2015. The Handbook of English Pronunciation. The Handbook of English Pronunciation 106 124 .
Falk Huettig & Susanne Brouwer. (2015) Delayed Anticipatory Spoken Language Processing in Adults with Dyslexia-Evidence from Eye-tracking. Dyslexia 21:2, pages 97-122.
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Mirjam Ernestus, Iris Hanique & Erik Verboom. (2015) The effect of speech situation on the occurrence of reduced word pronunciation variants. Journal of Phonetics 48, pages 60-75.
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Antonio Baroni. (2014) On the importance of being noticed: the role of acoustic salience in phonotactics (and casual speech). Language Sciences 46, pages 18-36.
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Katja Poellmann, Holger Mitterer & James M. McQueen. (2014) Use what you can: storage, abstraction processes, and perceptual adjustments help listeners recognize reduced forms. Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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Julia Strand, Andrea Simenstad, Allison Cooperman & Jonathon Rowe. (2013) Grammatical context constrains lexical competition in spoken word recognition. Memory & Cognition 42:4, pages 676-687.
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Takashi Otake & Anne Cutler. (2013) Lexical Selection in Action: Evidence from Spontaneous Punning. Language and Speech 56:4, pages 555-573.
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Melissa M. Baese-Berk, Ann R. Bradlow & Beverly A. Wright. (2013) Accent-independent adaptation to foreign accented speech. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 133:3, pages EL174-EL180.
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Anne Cutler, Takashi Otake & Laurence Bruggeman. (2012) Phonologically determined asymmetries in vocabulary structure across languages. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 132:2, pages EL155-EL160.
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