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ISCA Archive
Spoken Word Access Processes (SWAP)
May 29-31, 2000
Nijmegen, The Netherlands
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Bibliographic Reference
[SWAP-2000] Spoken word access processes (SWAP), ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop (ITRW),
Nijmegen, The Netherlands, May 29-31, 2000, ISCA Archive, http://www.isca-speech.org/archive_open/swap
Author Index and Quick Access to Abstracts
van Alphen
Amano
Aslin
Aylett
Bard
Bölte
Boudelaa
Brancazio
van den Brink
Brown
Butterfield
de Cara
Coenen (11)
Coenen (59)
Connine
Content (39)
Content (79)
Content (127)
Cooper
Cutler (43)
Cutler (47)
Cutler (63)
Dahan
Davis
Dumay (39)
Dumay (127)
Ford
Fowler
Frauenfelder (39)
Frauenfelder (79)
Frauenfelder (127)
Gaskell (7)
Gaskell (71)
Gaskell (103)
de Gelder
Goldinger
Goswami
Hagoort
Hawkins (139)
Hawkins (167)
Hogan
Janse
Kearns
Kingston
Kirk
Kondo
Large
Luce
van der Lugt
Magnuson (67)
Magnuson (107)
Marslen-Wilson (19)
Marslen-Wilson (23)
Marslen-Wilson (31)
Marslen-Wilson (35)
Marslen-Wilson (71)
Marslen-Wilson (103)
Mauth
McMurray
McQueen (43)
McQueen (47)
McQueen (63)
Meunier
Miller
Nearey
Nguyen
Nooteboom
Norris (43)
Norris (47)
Norris (63)
Pallier
Pierrehumbert
Pitt
Quené (15)
Quené (171)
Reid
te Riele
Rodd
Samuel
Sereno
Shillcock
Shoaf
Smith
Sotillo
Tanenhaus (67)
Tanenhaus (107)
Tao
Vroomen
Weber
Whalen
Zwitzerlood
Names written in boldface refer to first authors.
Full papers can be accessed from the abstracts (ISCA members only).
The abstract texts were taken from the homepage of the workshop and may differ from the abstracts contained
in the full papers.
Please note that each abstract opens in a separate window.
Table of Contents and Access to Abstracts
Bard, Ellen Gurman / Sotillo, C. / Aylett, M. P.: "Taking the hit: why
lexical and phonological processing should not make lexical access too easy", 3-6.
Gaskell, Gareth: "A quick rum picks you up, but is it good for you?
Sentence context effects in the identification of spoken words", 7-10.
Zwitserlood, Pienie / Coenen, Else:
"Consequences of assimilation for word recognition and lexical representation",
11-14.
Nooteboom, Sieb / Janse, Esther / Quené, Hugo / Riele, Saskia te:
"Multiple activation and early context effects", 15-19.
Marslen-Wilson, William D.:
"Organising principles in lexical access and representation? A view across
languages", 19-22.
Boudelaa, Sami / Marslen-Wilson, William D.:
"Non-concatenative morphemes in language processing: Evidence from Modern
Standard Arabic", 23-26.
Mauth, Kerstin:
"Does morphological information influence phonetic categorization?", 27-30.
Meunier, Fanny / Marslen-Wilson, William D. / Ford, Mike:
"Suffixed Word Lexical Representations in French", 31-34.
Reid, Agnieszka A. / Marslen-Wilson, William D.:
"Complexity and alternation in the Polish mental lexicon", 35-38.
Content, Alain / Dumay, Nicolas / Frauenfelder, Uli:
"The role of syllable structure in lexical segmentation:
Helping listeners avoid mondegreens", 39-42.
Norris, Dennis / Cutler, Anne / McQueen, James M. / Butterfield, Sally / Kearns, Ruth:
"Language-universal constraints on the segmentation of English", 43-46.
McQueen, James M. / Cutler, Anne / Norris, Dennis:
"Why merge really is autonomous and parsimonious", 47-50.
Samuel, Arthur G.:
"Some empirical tests of Merge's architecture", 51-54.
Alphen, Petra van:
"Does subcategorical variation influence lexical access?", 55-58
Bölte, Jens / Coenen, Else:
"Domato primes paprika: Mismatching pseudowords activate semantic and phonological
representations", 59-62
Cutler, Anne / Norris, Dennis / McQueen, James M.:
"Tracking TRACE's troubles", 63-66.
Dahan, Delphine / Magnuson, James S. / Tanenhaus, Michael K. / Hogan, Ellen M.:
"Tracking the time course of subcategorical mismatches on lexical access:
Evidence for lexical competition", 67-70
Pitt, Mark A. / Shoaf, Lisa (2000):
"Beyond traditional measures of lexical influences on perception", 75-78.
Frauenfelder, Uli H. / Content, Alain:
"Activation flow in models of spoken word recognition", 79-82.
Vroomen, Jean / Gelder, Beatrice de:
"Lipreading and the compensation for coarticulation mechanism", 83-86
Fowler, Carol A. / Brancazio, Lawrence:
" Feedback in audiovisual speech perception", 87-90
Amano, Shigeaki / Kondo, Tadahisa:
"Neighborhood and cohort in lexical processings of Japanese spoken words", 91-94.
Brink, Dannie van den / Brown, Colin / Hagoort, Peter):
"The N200 as an electrophysiological manifestation of early contextual influences
on spoken-word recognition", 95-98
Goswami, Usha /Cara, Bruno de:
"Lexical Representations and Development: The Emergence of Rime Processing", 99-102.
Rodd, Jennifer M. / Gaskell, M. Gareth / Marslen-Wilson, William D.:
"Semantic ambiguity in spoken word recognition", 103-106.
Tanenhaus, Michael K. / Magnuson, James S. / McMurray, Bob M. / Aslin, Richard N.:
"Evidence from research with an artificial lexicon", 107-110.
Luce, Paul A. / Large, Nathan R. (2000):
"Do spoken words have attractors?", 111-114.
Connine, Cynthia M.:
"The time course of lexical activation: Sequential constraint, co-articulatory
preview and additional processing time", 115-118.
Shillcock, Richard:
"Spoken word access: evidence from statistical analyses of the lexicon", 119-122.
Pierrehumbert, Janet:
"Why phonological constraints are so granular", 123-126
Dumay, Nicolas / Frauenfelder, Uli H. / Content, Alain:
"Acoustic-phonetic cues and lexical competition in segmentation of continuous
speech", 127-130
Kirk, Cecilia:
"Syllabic cues to word segmentation", 131-134.
Lugt, Arie van der:
"The time-course of competition", 135-138.
Smith, Rachel / Hawkins, Sarah:
"Allophonic influences on word-spotting experiments", 139-142.
Weber, Andrea:
"Native language phonotactics and nonnative language segmentation", 143-146.
Whalen, Doug H.:
"Occam's Razor is a double-edged sword: Reduced interaction is not necessarily
reduced power", 147-150.
Kingston, John:
"Context effects on sensitivity and response bias", 151-154
Goldinger, Stephen D.:
"The Role of Perceptual Episodes in Lexical Processing", 155-158.
Pallier, Christophe:
"Word recognition: Do we need phonological representations?", 159-162.
Cooper, Nicole:
"Native and non-native preprocessing of lexical stress in English word recognition", 163-166.
Hawkins, Sarah / Nguyen, Noel:
"Predicting syllable-coda voicing from the acoustic properties of syllable
onsets", 167-170.
Sereno, Joan / Quené, Hugo:
"Facilitatory and inhibitory effects using a segmental phonetic priming
paradigm", 171-174
Tao, Liang:
"Prosody and Word Recognition: A case study", 175-178.
Nearey, Terrance M.(2000):
"Phoneme-like units and speech perception", 179-182
Miller, Joanne L.:
"Mapping from Acoustic Signal to Phonetic Category: Nature and Role of Internal
Category Structure", 183-186