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Investigating consistency and orthographic neighbourhood density effects in Chinese character processingWong, Leung-wai, 王良慧 January 2012 (has links)
With about 90% of all characters in a Chinese dictionary belonging to the semantic-phonetic compound category, Chinese orthography is really more phonetic than logographic. Previous studies have shown that regularity and consistency in the phonetic radical facilitate lexical access of phonetic compound characters. These findings are in line with the literature on lexical access of alphabetic languages, suggesting that phonology plays a common role in the process of visual word recognition across orthographies. The contradictory orthographic neighbourhood density effects found in Chinese and English studies, however, challenge the universal applicability of current models of lexical access.
This paper reports an empirical study which investigates regularity, consistency and orthographic neighbourhood density effects on the reading and naming of traditional Chinese phonetic compound characters based on Cantonese phonology. Results showed that by manipulating regularity and consistency at the body rime level, a facilitatory orthographic neighbourhood density effect could be found in lexical decision but not naming. The implication is that regularity and consistency at the level of rime (in addition to the syllable level) is functional in Chinese reading. It also suggests that the body rime might have a general role in lexical access across languages. These findings are interpreted within the connectionist and dual-route models of lexical access. / published_or_final_version / Linguistics / Master / Master of Philosophy
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THE RELATION OF VISUAL PERCEPTION, AUDITORY PERCEPTION AND ONE ASPECT OF CONCEPTUALIZATION TO WORD RECOGNITIONGoldmark, Bernice Fabian Kern, 1925- January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
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CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN WORD RECOGNITION AND COMPREHENSION OF SECOND AND FIFTH GRADE CHILDRENHays, Warren Sherman, 1926- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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DIFFERENTIAL CLUES EMPLOYED IN WORD RECOGNITION FOR KNOWN AND UNKNOWN WORDSFreeman, Joseph Francis, 1931- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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SYNTACTIC/SEMANTIC ACCEPTABILITY AND SEMANTIC SIMILARITY OF ORAL READING ERRORS AS FUNCTIONS OF VARIATION IN ATTAINED COMPREHENSIONThomas, Keith John, 1943- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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The component structure of pre-literacy skills : further evidence for the simple view of reading and an exploration of links to parent literacy practices / Simple view of reading & parent literacy practicesAouad, Julie. January 2008 (has links)
The Simple View of Reading (SVR; Gough & Tunmer, 1986) provides a conceptual framework for describing the processes involved when readers comprehend text and strong evidence for the SVR comes from factor analytic studies showing dissociation between decoding and comprehension skills. The aim of the present study was to investigate if pre-decoding and comprehension components exist in Canadian English-speaking pre-readers (n = 36) with the use of Principal Components Analysis and to create a parent literacy questionnaire that contains parent literacy practices that may predict children's pre-decoding and comprehension skills. All children were administered a battery of pre-reading measures and parents completed a literacy survey. Principal Components Analysis demonstrated that listening comprehension and pre-decoding measures loaded as distinct components. The findings provide support for the SVR framework. No clear patterns were identified between parent literacy practices and children's pre-reading skills. Further work is needed with a larger and more representative sample.
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Activation of phonological and semantic codes in lexical processingThompson, Mary Ellen. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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A digital neural network approach to speech recognitionHaider, Najmi Ghani January 1989 (has links)
This thesis presents two novel methods for isolated word speech recognition based on sub-word components. A digital neural network is the fundamental processing strategy in both methods. The first design is based on the 'Separate Segmentation & Labelling' (SS&L) approach. The spectral data of the input utterance is first segmented into phoneme-like units which are then time normalised by linear time normalisation. The neural network labels the time-normalised phoneme-like segments 78.36% recognition accuracy is achieved for the phoneme-like unit. In the second design, no time normalisation is required. After segmentation, recognition is performed by classifying the data in a window as it is slid one frame at a time, from the start to the end of of each phoneme-like segment in the utterance. 73.97% recognition accuracy for the phoneme-like unit is achieved in this application. The parameters of the neural net have been optimised for maximum recognition performance. A segmentation strategy using the sum of the difference in filterbank channel energy over successive spectra produced 80.27% correct segmentation of isolated utterances into phoneme-like units. A linguistic processor based on that of Kashyap & Mittal [84] enables 93.11% and 93.49% word recognition accuracy to be achieved for the SS&L and 'Sliding Window' recognisers respectively. The linguistic processor has been redesigned to make it portable so that it can be easily applied to any phoneme based isolated word speech recogniser.
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The modulation of spatio-temporal brain dynamics in visual word recognition by psycholinguistic variables and tasks studies using EEG/MEG and fMRIChen, Yuanyuan January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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A mathematical model of word recognition strategiesChin-Chance, Selvin A January 1978 (has links)
Photocopy of typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1978. / Bibliography: leaves [155]-160. / Microfiche. / x, 160 leaves ill
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