All Stories

  1. Casual French comprehension when French is not your native language
  2. Speech register influences listeners’ word expectations
  3. The CABB dataset: A multimodal corpus of communicative interactions for behavioural and neural analyses
  4. Modelling Human Word Learning and Recognition Using Visually Grounded Speech
  5. Native Listeners’ Use of Information in Parsing Ambiguous Casual Speech
  6. DIANA, a Process-Oriented Model of Human Auditory Word Recognition
  7. The use of exemplars differs between native and non-native listening
  8. Teaching verb spelling through explicit direct instruction
  9. The Lombard intelligibility benefit of native and non-native speech for native and non-native listeners
  10. The role of grammar in spelling homophonous regular verbs
  11. How explicit instruction improves phonological awareness and perception of L2 sound contrasts in younger and older adults
  12. Do speech registers differ in the predictability of words?
  13. The influence of social distance on speech behavior: Formality variation in casual speech
  14. The Dutch verb-spelling paradox in social media
  15. Register variation by Spanish users of English: The Nijmegen Corpus of Spanish English
  16. Listeners’ processing of a given reduced word pronunciation variant directly reflects their exposure to this variant: Evidence from native listeners and learners of French
  17. The traces that novel morphologically complex words leave in memory are abstract in nature
  18. Advanced second language learners experience difficulties processing reduced word pronunciation variants
  19. Why we need to investigate casual speech to truly understand language production, processing and the mental lexicon
  20. Choice and pronunciation of words: Individual differences within a homogeneous group of speakers
  21. How robust are exemplar effects in word comprehension?
  22. Zij surfde, maar hij durfte niet
  23. The lifespan of lexical traces for novel morphologically complex words
  24. Dynamics of the auditory comprehension of prefixed words
  25. Choosing between the Dutch past-tense suffixes -te and -de
  26. The Voicedness of Intervocalic Word-Final Stops in Dutch