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The phonology of vowel VISC-osity – acoustic evidence and representational implications
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In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 6, No 1 (2021); 26 ; 2397-1835 (2021)
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Acoustic evidence for affix classes: A case study of Brazilian Portuguese
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In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 6, No 1 (2021); 21 ; 2397-1835 (2021)
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THIRD LANGUAGE ACQUISITION: A STUDY OF UNSTRESSED VOWEL REDUCTION ...
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THIRD LANGUAGE ACQUISITION: A STUDY OF UNSTRESSED VOWEL REDUCTION ...
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Homophone reduction: Focus vs. Accessibility vs. Phonological rhyming constraint (anti-epistrophe) ...
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Online study of lateralisation of language and literacy processing in monolingual and bilingual adults ...
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The activation of focus alternatives by contrastive accents examined through cross-modally primed lexical decision – A replication attempt ...
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Now you hear me, later you don’t: The Immediacy of Linguistic Computation and the Representation of Speech ...
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The role of prosody in processing the structure of events in Portuguese: a behavioral test ...
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Recruitment of Prior Knowledge during Sleep-Based Consolidation of Phonotactic Patterns for Speech Production ...
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The development of tone discrimination in infancy: An online adaptation ...
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Can comprehenders use prosody to interpret potential indirect requests? ...
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Abstract:
People often speak indirectly. For example, "My office is really hot" could be intended both as a complaint about the temperature, as well as a request to turn on the AC. Similarly, "Can you open that window" could be a request to open the window, or a question about the hearer's ability to do so. Previous work (Trott et al, 2019) found that 5 human speakers could produce reliable prosodic cues to signal the intent of potential indirect requests. This was determined both via an analysis of the acoustic features of their utterances, as well as a behavioral experiment in which human comprehenders were asked to identify which of two utterances was intended as a request. We have since run another (unpublished) experiment demonstrating that human comprehenders can also identify the intent of a single utterance at an above chance rate. We then decided to replicate these results with a larger sample of speakers. In another pre-registration (https://osf.io/34fc7), we described our plan for collecting audio samples ...
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Keyword:
ambiguity; FOS Languages and literature; indirect requests; Linguistics; Phonetics and Phonology; prosody; Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics; Semantics and Pragmatics; Social and Behavioral Sciences
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URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/mx64e https://osf.io/mx64e/
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Testing the Gleam-Glum Effect with the Bouba-Kiki Paradigm (Adult) ...
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The effect of non-adjacent phonological overlap on naming: A picture-word interference task ...
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The relationship between phrasing and prominence in Mandarin production ...
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