05672nam 2200709Ia 450 991077931160332120230802005732.01-283-89526-990-272-7332-4(CKB)2550000000711178(EBL)1079720(OCoLC)822017871(SSID)ssj0000783764(PQKBManifestationID)12342720(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000783764(PQKBWorkID)10760730(PQKB)11215626(MiAaPQ)EBC1079720(Au-PeEL)EBL1079720(CaPaEBR)ebr10631236(CaONFJC)MIL420776(EXLCZ)99255000000071117820120613d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrMethodological and analytic frontiers in lexical research[electronic resource] /edited by Gary Libben, Gonia Jarema, Chris WestburyAmsterdam ;Philadelphia John Benjamins Pub. Co.20121 online resource (475 p.)Benjamins current topics ;47Description based upon print version of record.90-272-0266-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Methodological and Analytic Frontiers in Lexical Research; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Preface; The challenge of embracing complexity; New approaches to data analysis; The role of implemented models; Consequences for the future: the conceptualization of psycholinguistic variables; Note; References; Measures of phonological typicality; Method; The original operationalisation of phonological typicality; Varying parameters of the operationalisation; Validation of the measures; Results; Coherence; Psychological validity; Discussion; Notes; ReferencesAssessing language impairment in aphasiaHistory of aphasia assessment; Aphasia assessment instruments; The future of aphasia assessment; Notes; References; Behavioral profiles; The method and its applications; Behavioral profiles: The method; The polysemy of To Run; The polysemy of 'to get'; Russian verbs meaning 'to try'; Contrastive phasal verbs; Size adjectives; Behavioral profiles and their relation to other methods and theoretical accounts; Exemplar-based models: Their main assumptions/characteristics and relation to BPs; Case-by-case based approaches to alternations; Notes; ReferencesUsing a maze task to track lexical and sentence processingThe Maze task; The G-maze and the L-maze; Disadvantages of the maze task; The maze task and lexical access; Using a maze task for language learning; Conclusion; References; Stimulus norming; How this approach can advance knowledge; Key domains of application; Currently available hardware and software; Dependent variables; Commonly explored independent variables; New independent variables and new opportunities for the approach; Conclusion; References; Connectionism and the role of morphology in visual word recognitionConnectionism: Theory and applicationsMorphological structure and visual word recognition; Moving forward: Technical issues and problems to be solved; Future directions; Cross-language comparisons; Learning; Conclusion; Acknowledgments; Note; References; Towards a localist-connectionist model of word translation; Word translation; The Revised Hierarchical Model; Descriptive adequacy: Does the model retain essential properties of the human processing system and its representations?; Horizontal and vertical generality of the RHM: Can the model generalize across tasks and stimulus sets?Falsifiability and modifiabilityResearch generativity; The BIA(+) Localist-Connectionist Framework; Recent innovations and developments: Multilink; Orthography (input); Orthographic similarity, word length, and word frequency.; Cognate processing; Semantics (throughput for concept mediation); Phonology (output); Orthography to phonology (throughput for word association); Simulating the word translation process as a whole; Simulating the results of different tasks; Simulating the lexical decision results of Dijkstra et al. (2010); The shape of the future; ReferencesChinese as a natural experimentNeuroimaging plays an increasingly important role in the investigation of all aspects of human cognition, including language. Historically, experimental psychology and neuroimaging relied on very different techniques, as neuroimaging studies required comparisons between different tasks rather than manipulation of conditions within a single task, as is standard in behavioural experiments. However, methodology has advanced in the past decade such that many classic behavioural paradigms can now be employed in studies that measure brain activity. We review the technical foundations of conducting sBenjamins current topics ;v. 47.LexicologyMethodologyLinguistic analysis (Linguistics)Linguistic modelsApplied linguisticsLexicologyMethodology.Linguistic analysis (Linguistics)Linguistic models.Applied linguistics.413.028Libben Gary1490520Jarema Gonia1490521Westbury Chris1562340MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910779311603321Methodological and analytic frontiers in lexical research3829892UNINA