{"pk":25566,"title":"Voice-specific effects in semantic association","subtitle":null,"abstract":"Benefits to lexical access are provided by acoustically-cued\nspeaker characteristics (such as gender and age), but little work\nhas investigated these effects in meaning-based tasks. Word\nrecognition is affected both by a word‚Äôs base-level activation\nand by associative spread of activation among words, and is\ncorrelated with speed of lexical access. In a free association\ntask and a semantic priming task, we find off-line and on-line\nevidence of speaker-specific relationships between words. Our\nresults suggest the need to extend existing models of spoken\nword recognition to include interactions between linguistic information\nand social information that is cued by variation in\nspeech.","language":"eng","license":{"name":"","short_name":"","text":null,"url":""},"keywords":[{"word":"linguistics; speech perception; spoken word\nrecognition; semantic priming; free association"}],"section":"Papers","is_remote":true,"remote_url":"https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4v07k1k7","frozenauthors":[{"first_name":"Ed","middle_name":"","last_name":"King","name_suffix":"","institution":"Stanford University","department":""},{"first_name":"Meghan","middle_name":"","last_name":"Sumner","name_suffix":"","institution":"Stanford University","department":""}],"date_submitted":null,"date_accepted":null,"date_published":"2015-01-01T18:00:00Z","render_galley":null,"galleys":[{"label":"PDF","type":"pdf","path":"https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cognitivesciencesociety/article/25566/galley/15190/download/"}]}