Search results for "markedness"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Sonority as a Phonological Cue in Early Perception of Written Syllables in French

2020

Many studies focused on the letter and sound co-occurrences to account for the well-documented syllable-based effects in French in visual (pseudo)word processing. Although these language-specific statistical properties are crucial, recent data suggest that studies that go all-in on phonological and orthographic regularities may be misguided in interpreting how—and why—readers locate syllable boundaries and segment clusters. Indeed, syllable-based effects could depend on more abstract, universal phonological constraints that rule and govern how letter and sound occur and co-occur, and readers could be sensitive to sonority—a universal phonological element—for processing (pseudo)words. Here, …

Frenchmedia_common.quotation_subjectWord processinglcsh:BF1-990visual word processingphonological universals050105 experimental psychologysonority03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMarkednessReading (process)PerceptionPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencessyllableGeneral Psychologymedia_common05 social sciencesBrief Research ReportLinguisticsConjunction (grammar)illusory conjunctionsmarkednesslcsh:PsychologyPsychologie[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologySonority hierarchyIllusory conjunctionsSyllablePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Psychology
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Punto interrogativo

2021

Analisi morfologica e sintattica del punto interrogativo nei disegni di Saul Steinberg Morphological and syntactic analysis of the question mark in Saul Steinberg's drawings

Saul Steinberg Punto interrogativo Marcatezza Opposizioni sintagmaticheSaul Steinberg Question Mark Markedness Syntagmatic OppositionsSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Contact-Induced Convergence: Typology and Areality

2006

From an integrative perspective, research on language typology and research on areality understood in terms of contact-induced convergence are mutually dependent. Typologists need to be aware that their generalizations are as reliable as they manage to integrate effects of contact into their statistics. Contact linguists need to be aware that typological findings may not qualify as independent evidence for their field. Thus, typologists and contact linguists both need to have certain information concerning each other's field. For that reason, this article covers both fields under one title. The article is divided into three main sections. The first deals with language contact and its struct…

TypologyMarkednessSection (archaeology)Field (Bourdieu)SprachbundLanguage contactConvergence (relationship)PsychologyCode-switchingLinguistics
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Markedness and Naturalness in the Acquisition of Phonology

2002

pennock@uv.es (este artículo no aparece en grec)

UNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRASNaturalnessMarkednessFilologías:LINGÜÍSTICA::Lingüística sincrónica::Fonología [UNESCO]UNESCO::LINGÜÍSTICA::Lingüística sincrónica::Fonología:CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS [UNESCO]Filología inglesaOtras filologías modernasPhonologyMarkedness ; Naturalness ; Phonology
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Marcatge posicional i prominència en el vocalisme àton

2008

It has long been noticed that more perceptible elements tend to associate to positions that are structurally stronger to the end that several prominent features converge in the same site; and vice versa: elements of low perceptibility prototypically associate to less prominent positions ("positional markedness"). The main aim of this paper is to present the effects of positional markedness in the a-tonic vowel system of Catalan through the analysis of two cases that have not been studied in depth, i.e. the occurrence of different epenthetic vowels according to the position in which they appear in Alghero and western Catalan, and the presence of different patterns of vowel reduction in weste…

lcsh:Language and LiteratureFonologiaCatalan languageUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRASLingüísticaPositional markedness; prominence; epenthesis; vowel reductionFilologíasVocalsmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyPositional markednessepenthesisPhonologybehavioral disciplines and activitiesCatalà parlatlcsh:Philology. LinguisticsCatalàprominencelcsh:P1-1091:CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS [UNESCO]mental disorderslcsh:Pvowel reductionVowelspsychological phenomena and processes
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Universal Restrictions in Reading: What Do French Beginning Readers (Mis)perceive?

2020

International audience; Despite the many reports that consider statistical distribution to be vitally important in visual identification tasks in children, some recent studies suggest that children do not always rely on statistical properties to help them locate syllable boundaries. Indeed, sonority-a universal phonological element-might be a reliable source for syllable segmentation. More specifically, are children sensitive to a universal phonological sonority-based markedness continuum within the syllable boundaries for segmentation (e.g., from marked, illegal intervocalic clusters, "jr," to unmarked, legal intervocalic clusters, "rj"), and how does this sensitivity progress with reading…

sonoritysyllable segmentationmarkednesslcsh:PsychologyFrenchreadinglcsh:BF1-990[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyPsychologyphonological universalsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSOriginal Researchillusory conjunctions
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