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Discriminative lexicon simulations material
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Scripts ...
Karlina Denistia; R. Harald Baayen. - : figshare, 2019
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Dataset ...
Karlina Denistia; R. Harald Baayen. - : figshare, 2019
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Scripts ...
Karlina Denistia; R. Harald Baayen. - : figshare, 2019
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Dataset ...
Karlina Denistia; R. Harald Baayen. - : figshare, 2019
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6
Semantic vector model on the Indonesian prefixes PE- and PEN-
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Reading Dutch trigrams - a discriminative learning model containing lexical bundles ...
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8
N-gram probability effects in a cloze task.
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/ShaoulBaayenWestburyML2014.pdf (2014)
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Sidestepping the combinatorial explosion: Towards a processing model based on discriminative learning
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/BaayenHendrixLSA2011.pdf (2013)
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An analysis of the processing of multiword units in sentence reading and unit presentation using eye movement data: Implications for theories of MWUs
Columbus, Georgina C. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2012
Abstract: Degree: Doctor of Philosophy ; Abstract: Multiword units (MWUs) have been the subject of much research in psycholinguistics, due to their syntactic and semantic idiosyncrasies. While studies traditionally focused on idioms (a piece of cake), more recent work has focused on another type: lexical bundles (in the middle of). How MWUs are stored and retrieved remains a central question in the literature, the answer to which will add to our understanding of language processing. To date though, there have been few investigations comparing the processing of different types of MWUs. This dissertation aims to fill that gap through analyses of eye movement data during normal sentence reading and trigram reading. The sentence reading results suggest that the familiarity rating for the MWU types analysed here is a relevant predictor of MWU processing. Surprisingly however, individual word frequency has more predictive capacity for MWU reading times than does MWU frequency. Much of the variance is explained by individual word frequency instead. Overall, the three MWU types investigated here are distinguished from one another in fixation durations on words, particularly for idioms and lexical bundles. For sentence reading times, in contrast, the effects of the MWU types are cancelled out, suggesting that processing difficulties may have been resolved at the sentence level. The second study investigates MWU type effects while reading them without context. Each MWU in this study is a trigram taken from the Google Web1T n-gram corpus (Brants & Franz, 2006) using stratified sampling across n-gram frequencies. The trigrams were coded for MWU type based on the categories used in Chapter 1. The results show that MWU effects are visible at the trigram level even without context. Somewhat surprisingly, however, there is also evidence of MWU types affecting processing of the first word in the first fixation duration, and of the first bigram in the subgaze duration. The findings suggest the semantic composition of MWUs is apparent to the reader very early. Our results support a usage-based model of language access and storage, such as those put forward by Bybee (e.g., 2006), Pierrehumbert (2001) and Bod (1998), where individual and unit frequency both affect reading times.
Keyword: exemplar-based language models; eye movement; language processing; multiword units; reading theory
URL: https://era.library.ualberta.ca/files/pv63g078r
http://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.25291
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An analysis of the processing of multiword units in sentence reading and unit presentation using eye movement data: Implications for theories of MWUs
Columbus, Georgina C. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2012
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12
Quantitative social dialectology: explaining linguistic variation geographically and socially
In: ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/d8/a3/PLoS_One_2011_Sep_1_6(9)_e23613.tar.gz (2011)
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13
Corpus linguistics and naive discriminative learning A linguística de corpus e a aprendizagem discriminativa ingênua
In: Revista Brasileira de Linguística Aplicada, Vol 11, Iss 2, Pp 295-328 (2011) (2011)
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14
A real experiment is a factorial experiment
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/baayenML2010matching.pdf (2010)
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15
The directed compound graph of English An exploration of lexical connectivity and its processing consequences
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/BaayenLingBerichte2010.pdf (2010)
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Corpus linguistics and naïve discriminative learning
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/BaayenBJAL2011.pdf (2010)
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17
Reading of polymorphemic Dutch compounds: Towards a multiple route model of lexical processing
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/kupermanSchreuderBertramBaayenJEP2009.pdf (2009)
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18
Capturing Correlational Structure in Russian Paradigms: a Case Study in Logistic Mixed-Effects Modeling
In: http://www.sfs.uni-tuebingen.de/%7Ehbaayen/publications/jandaNessetBaayenCLLT2010.pdf (2009)
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19
Predicting the dative alternation
In: http://www.stanford.edu/~bresnan/CFI04.pdf (2007)
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20
Lexical frequency and voice assimilation
In: http://www.ualberta.ca/~baayen/publications/ernestusetaljasa.pdf (2006)
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