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Keyword [Spoken word recognition]
Result: 1 - 18 | Page: 1 of 1
1.
Word Frequency Effect And Polysemy Effect In Chinese Spoken Bisyllable Word Recognition
2.
The Effect Of Emotional Prosody And Competitive Environment On Spoken Word Recognition
3.
The Influence Of Phonological Information On Spoken Word Recognition In Mandarin Chinese: Evidence From Eye Movements
4.
The Effect Of Segmental Information And Supra-segmental Information On 4 Year Old Children’s Spoken Word Recognition In Mandarin Chinese: Evidence From Eye Movements
5.
The Roles Of Segmental And Supra-segmental Information On Mandarin Spoken Word Recognition In 4 Years Old Children
6.
Influence Of Semantic Consistency And Visual Complexity On Spoken Word Recognition In 5-6 Year Old Children: Evidence From Eye Movement Research
7.
The Eye Movement Research On The Influence Of Phonetic Information And Context On Chinese Auditory Vocabulary Recognition
8.
Spoken word recognition in quiet and in noise by native and non-native listeners: Effects of age of immersion and vocabulary size
9.
The effects of phonological neighborhoods on spoken word recognition in Mandarin Chinese
10.
Electrophysiological correlates of phonological processing during spoken word recognition
11.
Lexical tone in spoken word recognition: A view from Manadarin Chinese
12.
Spoken word recognition in children with specific language impairment: Effects of imageability and frequency
13.
The window to the bilingual mind: Eye movements reveal psycholinguistic grain sizes of bilingual spoken word recognition
14.
Lexical Access in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy and Severe Speech and Physical Impairmen
15.
Spoken word recognition and serial recall of words from the giant component and words from lexical islands in the phonological network
16.
Phonological Effect And Orthographic Effect In Chinese Spoken Word Recognition
17.
Tonal And Segmental Information Processing In Mandarin Spoken Word Recegnition
18.
Influence Of Lexical Tone Similarity On Spoken Word Recognition In Mandarin Chinese:Evidence From Eye-Tracking
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