‏‎facilitating lexical access for the fluent production of speech‎‏

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abstract

‏‎the hypothesis is that recent and frequent exposure to lexical items leads to a more fluent production of speech in terms of rate of speech. to test the hypothesis , a one- way anova experimental design was carried out. 24 senior student of efl participated in a one-way interview test. data analyses revealed that those who were exposed frequently to the lexical items over a week prior to interview , demonstrated higher scores of speech rate. however single, recent exposure to lexical items did not have any significant effect on the fluency of speakers‎‏

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‏‎faciliting lexical access for the fluent production of speech‎‏

‏‎the hypothesis is that recent and frequent exposure to lexical items leads to a more fluent production of speech in terms of rate of speech. to test the hypothesis,a one-way anova experimental design was carried out. 24 sednior students of efl participated in a one-way interview test. data analyses revealed that those who were exposed frequently to the lexical items over a week prior to inter...

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Lexical Access in Speech Production Introduction

Lexical access in speech production proceeds at a rate of, on the average, two to three words per second. At this rate words are selected from a production lexicon which contains thousands, and probably tens of thousands, of words. These words are not only selected, but also phonologically encoded. This happens at a rate of about 15 speech sounds per second. The problem to be addressed in this ...

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Running Head: PRIMING IN LEXICAL ACCESS The Role of Priming in Lexical Access and Speech Production

Human language function is inextricably linked to memory in that the comprehension and production of language requires access to linguistic structures stored at various levels of abstraction and complexity. The act of producing even a single word requires (at a minimum) the retrieval of its semantic, lexical, syntactic, and phonological/orthographic properties before articulation can occur. As ...

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GESTURE, SPEECH, AND LEXICAL ACCESS: The Role of Lexical Movements in Speech Production

In a within-subjects design that varied whether speakers were allowed to gesture and the difficulty of lexical access, speakers were videotaped as they described animated action cartoons to a listener. When speakers were permitted to gesture, they gestured more often during phrases with spatial content than during phrases with other content. Speech with spatial content was less fluent when spea...

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Word for word: Multiple lexical access in speech production

It is quite normal for us to produce one or two million word tokens every year. Speaking is a dear occupation and producing words is at the core of it. Still, producing even a single word is a highly complex aŒair. Recently, Levelt, Roelofs, and Meyer (1999) reviewed their theory of lexical access in speech production, which dissects the word-producing mechanism as a staged application of vario...

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A Theory of Lexical Access In Speech Production

Preparing words in speech production is normally a fast and accurate process. We generate them two or three per second in fluent conversation; and overtly naming a clear picture of an object can easily be initiated within 600 msec after picture onset. The underlying process, however, is exceedingly complex. The theory reviewed in this target article analyzes this process as staged and feed-forw...

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document type: thesis

وزارت علوم، تحقیقات و فناوری - دانشگاه تبریز

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