TY - BOOK AU - Marslen-Wilson,William ED - Max Planck Institut für Psycholinguistik (Nijmegen, Netherlands) ED - Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen. TI - Lexical representation and process SN - 9780262279178 AV - P326 .L39 1989eb U1 - 413/.028 19 PY - 1989/// KW - Lexicology KW - Congresses KW - Psycholinguistics KW - Psycholinguistique KW - Congrès KW - FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY KW - bisacsh KW - REFERENCE KW - LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES KW - Vocabulary KW - fast KW - Psycholinguïstiek KW - gtt KW - Cognitieve processen KW - Mentaal lexicon KW - Electronic books KW - Conference papers and proceedings KW - Congressen (vorm) N1 - Outgrowth of a conference held in Nijmegen, the Netherlands under the joint sponsorship of the Max-Planck-Institut für Psycholinguistik and the Interfacultaire Werkgroep Taal en Spraakgedrag of the University of Nijmegen; "A Bradford book."; Includes bibliographical references and index N2 - Part 1 Psychological models of lexical processing: access and integration - projecting sound onto meaning, William Marslen-Wilson; visual word recognition and pronunciation - a computational model and its implications, Mark S. Seidenberg; basic issues in lexical processing, Kenneth I. Forster; lexical access in speech production, Brian Butterworth; the retrieval of phonological forms in production - test of predictions from a connectionist model, Gary S. Dell. Part 2 The nature of the input: review of selected models of speech perception, Dennis H. Klatt; connectionist approaches to acoustic phonetic processing, Jeffrey L. Elman; parafoveal preview effects and lexical access during eye fixations in reading, Keith Rayner and David A. Balota; reading and the mental lexicon - on the uptake of visual information, Derek Besner and James C. Johnston. Part 3 Lexical structure and process: understanding words and word recognition - can phonology help?, Uli H. Frauenfelder and Aditi Lahiri; auditory lexical access - where do we start?, Anne Cutler; on mental representation of morphology and its diagnosis by measures of visual access speed, Leslie Henderson; morphological parsing and the lexicon, Jorge Hankamer; psycholinguistic issues in the lexical representation of meaning, Robert Schreuder and Giovanni B. Flores D'Arcais. Part 4 Parsing and interpretation: the role of lexical representation in language comprehension, Lorraine Komisarjevsky Tyler; grammar, interpretation and processing from the lexicon, Mark J. Steedman; against lexical generation of syntax, Lyn Frazier; lexical structure and language comprehension, Michael K. Tanenhaus and Greg N. Carlson UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=48593 ER -