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  1. speech perception and for spoken word recog-nition, with the former focusing on processes that operate to decode speech sounds regard-less of whether those sounds comprise words. In the most recent article on speech percep-tion in the Annual Review of Psychology series (Diehl et al. 2004), the focus was exclusively

  2. Alejandro Romero. With more than 1,300 entries, this new edition of The Concise Dictionary ofPsychology is comprehensive, clear and user-friendly. With extensive cross-referencing to related entries, it includes many additional entries and entries from peripheral fields, such as Babinski reflex, Doppler effect , Little Albert and Murphy's Law.

    • Rizky Farandi
  3. Mar 18, 2021 · This chapter provides an overview of the large repertory of familiar or “formulaic” language (FL), including conversational speech formulas, pause fillers, idioms, sayings, and conventional expressions, which are known to members of a speech community. Evidence that these expressions exist in holistic form in mental representation is reviewed.

    • Diana Van Lancker Sidtis, Diana Van Lancker Sidtis, Seung Yun Yang
    • 2021
  4. Dec 31, 2006 · errors involving the sounds or words of the language, and provide a window onto the. processes of speech production. Errors can be classified according to the units of speech. (e.g. phoneme, word ...

  5. Feb 11, 2022 · Contamination: fusing ideas into one another. Accelerated thinking: rapid flow and increased volume of speech. Flight of ideas: losing track of where a thought is going. Inhibited thinking: slow ...

  6. Abstract. Speech perception is conventionally defined as the perceptual and cognitive processes leading to the discrimination, identification, and interpretation of speech sounds. However, to gain a broader understanding of the concept, such processes must be investigated relative to their interaction with long-term knowledge—lexical ...

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  8. Jan 1, 2023 · A dozen ways to study speech errors. Visualizations of selected paradigms used in the reviewed literature to understand the production and perception of speech and language errors; the number 12 is specifically chosen in homage to Baars (1992). The top of each panel represents the paradigm; the bottom represents the response used as data.

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