Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
about
Pauses enhance chunk recognition in song element strings by zebra finches.Contributions of infant word learning to language development.Visual speech segmentation: using facial cues to locate word boundaries in continuous speechIsolated words enhance statistical language learning in infancy.Connecting cues: overlapping regularities support cue discovery in infancyThe strength and time course of lexical activation of pronunciation variants.The secret is in the sound: from unsegmented speech to lexical categoriesEvent-related potentials index segmentation of nonsense sounds.Lexical, syntactic, and stress-pattern cues for speech segmentationOn the unsupervised analysis of domain-specific Chinese texts.Lexical neighborhoods and the word-form representations of 14-month-olds.Language learning from positive evidence, reconsidered: a simplicity-based approach.Stored word sequences in language learning: the effect of familiarity on children's repetition of four-word combinations.Universal and language-specific sublexical cues in speech perception: a novel electroencephalography-lesion approach.Diminutives in child-directed speech supplement metric with distributional word segmentation cues.The use of sequential probabilities in the segmentation of speech.Linguistic Constraints on Statistical Word Segmentation: The Role of Consonants in Arabic and English.Words, rules, and mechanisms of language acquisition.Quantitative Linguistic Predictors of Infants' Learning of Specific English Words.TRACX2: a connectionist autoencoder using graded chunks to model infant visual statistical learning.Local redundancy governs infants' spontaneous orienting to visual-temporal sequences.Learning a generative probabilistic grammar of experience: a process-level model of language acquisition.(Non)words, (non)words, (non)words: evidence for a protolexicon during the first year of life.The Utility of Cognitive Plausibility in Language Acquisition Modeling: Evidence From Word Segmentation.Harmonic cues for speech segmentation: a cross-linguistic corpus study on child-directed speech.On-line Assessment of Statistical Learning by Event-related Potentials.Make It Short and Easy: Username Complexity Determines Trustworthiness Above and Beyond Objective Reputation.Diminutives facilitate word segmentation in natural speech: cross-linguistic evidence.The role of embodied intention in early lexical acquisition.Using Predictability for Lexical Segmentation.Universality versus language-specificity in listening to running speech.Co-occurrence statistics as a language-dependent cue for speech segmentation.Distal prosody affects learning of novel words in an artificial language.[Prosody, speech input and language acquisition].MDLChunker: a MDL-based cognitive model of inductive learning.Learning diphone-based segmentation.Words in puddles of sound: modelling psycholinguistic effects in speech segmentation.Simplifying reading: applying the simplicity principle to reading.Modeling the contribution of phonotactic cues to the problem of word segmentation.Statistical information and coarticulation as cues to word boundaries: a matter of signal quality.
P2860
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P2860
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
description
1996 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1996年の論文
@ja
1996年学术文章
@wuu
1996年学术文章
@zh
1996年学术文章
@zh-cn
1996年学术文章
@zh-hans
1996年学术文章
@zh-my
1996年学术文章
@zh-sg
1996年學術文章
@yue
1996年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
@en
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
@nl
type
label
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
@en
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
@nl
prefLabel
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
@en
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
@nl
P1433
P1476
Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation.
@en
P2093
T A Cartwright
P304
P356
10.1016/S0010-0277(96)00719-6
P577
1996-10-01T00:00:00Z