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      Between- and within-language priming is the same: Evidence for shared bilingual syntactic representations

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      Memory & Cognition
      Springer Nature

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          Orthographic Neighborhood Effects in Bilingual Word Recognition

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            Language selectivity is the exception, not the rule: Arguments against a fixed locus of language selection in bilingual speech

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              Structural priming: a critical review.

              Repetition is a central phenomenon of behavior, and researchers have made extensive use of it to illuminate psychological functioning. In the language sciences, a ubiquitous form of such repetition is structural priming, a tendency to repeat or better process a current sentence because of its structural similarity to a previously experienced ("prime") sentence (J. K. Bock, 1986). The recent explosion of research in structural priming has made it the dominant means of investigating the processes involved in the production (and increasingly, comprehension) of complex expressions such as sentences. This review considers its implications for the representation of syntax and the mechanisms of production and comprehension and their relationship. It then addresses the potential functions of structural priming, before turning to its implications for first language acquisition, bilingualism, and aphasia. The authors close with theoretical and empirical recommendations for future investigations. (Copyright) 2008 APA, all rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Memory & Cognition
                Mem Cogn
                Springer Nature
                0090-502X
                1532-5946
                February 2011
                November 2010
                : 39
                : 2
                : 276-290
                Article
                10.3758/s13421-010-0016-5
                21264625
                cf1dab34-96c4-470b-ab99-dc187eeab9be
                © 2011
                History

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