Introduction to Experimental Linguistics
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Newark :
John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,
2021.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Preface
- 1. Experimental Linguistics: General Principles
- 1.1. The scientific process
- 1.1.1. Qualitative and quantitative approaches
- 1.1.2. Observational research and experimental research
- 1.2. Characteristics of experimental research
- 1.2.1. Research questions and hypotheses
- 1.2.2. Manipulation of variables
- 1.2.3. Control of external variables
- 1.2.4. The notions of participants and items
- 1.2.5. Use of statistics and generalization of results
- 1.3. Types of experiment in experimental linguistics
- 1.3.1. Studying linguistic productions
- 1.3.2. Explicit and implicit measures of comprehension
- 1.3.3. Offline and online measures of comprehension
- 1.3.4. Research designs and experimental designs
- 1.4. Advantages and disadvantages of experimental linguistics
- 1.5. Where to access research on experimental linguistics
- 1.6. Conclusion
- 1.7. Revision questions and answer key
- 1.7.1. Questions
- 1.7.2. Answer key
- 1.8. Further reading
- 2. Building a Valid and Reliable Experiment
- 2.1. Validity and reliability of an experiment
- 2.2. Independent and dependent variables
- 2.3. Different measurement scales for variables
- 2.3.1. Qualitative variables
- 2.3.2. Quantitative variables
- 2.4. Operationalizing variables
- 2.5. Choosing a measure for every variable
- 2.6. Notions of reliability and validity of measurements
- 2.7. Choosing the modalities of independent variables
- 2.8. Identifying and controlling external and confounding variables
- 2.9. Conclusion
- 2.10. Revision questions and answer key
- 2.10.1. Questions
- 2.10.2. Answer key
- 2.11. Further reading
- 3. Studying Linguistic Productions
- 3.1. Differences between language comprehension and language production
- 3.2. Corpora and experiments as tools for studying production
- 3.3. Free elicitation tasks
- 3.4. Constrained elicitation tasks
- 3.5. Repetition tasks
- 3.6. Conclusion
- 3.7. Revision questions and answer key
- 3.7.1. Questions
- 3.7.2. Answer key
- 3.8. Further reading
- 4. Offline Methods for Studying Language Comprehension
- 4.1. Explicit tasks
- 4.1.1. Metalinguistic tasks
- 4.1.2. Acceptability judgments
- 4.1.3. Questionnaires
- 4.1.4. Forced-choice preference tasks
- 4.1.5. Comprehension tests
- 4.2. Implicit tasks
- 4.2.1. Action tasks
- 4.2.2. Recall tasks and recognition tasks
- 4.3. Conclusion
- 4.4. Revision questions and answer key
- 4.4.1. Questions
- 4.4.2. Answer key
- 4.5. Further reading
- 5. Online Methods for Studying Language Comprehension
- 5.1. Think-aloud protocols
- 5.2. Using time as an indicator of comprehension
- 5.3. Priming
- 5.4. Lexical decision tasks
- 5.5. Naming tasks
- 5.6. Stroop task
- 5.7. Verification task
- 5.8. The self-paced reading paradigm
- 5.9. Eye-tracking