Now showing items 5-10 of 10

    • Long-distance attraction effects in subject-verb agreement processing 

      Eversole, Nathan; Witzel, Jeffrey (Department of Linguistics and TESOL, the University of Texas at Arlington., 2014)
    • Masked onset priming in Korean: Evidence for syllable- and phoneme-level effects 

      Choi, Yujeong; Witzel, Naoko; Witzel, Jeffrey (Department of Linguistics and TESOL, the University of Texas at Arlington., 2012)
    • Relative Clause Processing: Evidence from Russian 

      Price, Iya Khelm; Witzel, Jeffrey (Department of Linguistics and TESOL, University of Texas at Arlington., 2014)
      Studies on relative clauses (RCs) in a number of languages have shown that object-extracted RCs (ORCs) are more difficult to process than subject-extracted RCs (SRCs). SRC-ORC processing asymmetry has been attributed to: • ...
    • Sugar Makes You Sweet: Polysemy and Cultural Beliefs about Causation 

      Stvan, Laurel Smith (Department of Linguistics & TESOL, University of Texas at Arlington, July 20-22)
      Earlier studies showed some word pairs in health discourse being conflated. If some polysemes are not recognized as fully separate senses, is there a pattern of use showing if speakers feel that experiencing one sense ...
    • Testing the viability of web DMDX for masked priming experiments 

      Cornelius, Samantha; Witzel, Jeffrey; Witzel, Naoko; Forster, Kenneth; Forster, Jonathan (Department of Linguistics and TESOL, the University of Texas at Arlington., 2012)
      Purpose: • Evaluate the viability of a web-based version of the DMDX software package (web DMDX). • It was unclear whether web DMDX allowed for the consistent and accurate display of experimental stimuli. Research ...
    • Vernacular Explanations of Causation in Lay Health Discourse 

      Stvan, Laurel Smith (Department of Linguistics & TESOL, University of Texas at Arlington, 2013-06-07)
      Few linguistic works exam vernacular terms for health concepts rather than technical medical terms (cf. Rueda-Baclig & Florencio 2003). The prevalence of conversations on food, sleep, exercise, and illness – and the ...