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Table of Contents

Cover

Title page

Copyright

Preface

1 Experimental Linguistics: General Principles 1.1. The scientific process 1.2. Characteristics of experimental research 1.3. Types of experiment in experimental linguistics 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 1.8. 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 2.4. 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

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 3.8. Further reading

4 Offline Methods for Studying Language Comprehension 4.1. Explicit tasks 4.2. Implicit tasks 4.3. Conclusion 4.4. Revision questions and 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 5.10. The visual world paradigm 5.11. Conclusion 5.12. Revision questions and answer key 5.13. Further reading

10  6 Practical Aspects for Designing an Experiment 6.1. Searching scientific literature and getting access to bibliographic resources 6.2. Conceptualizing and formulating the research hypothesis 6.3. Choosing the experimental design 6.4. Building the experimental material 6.5. Building the experiment 6.6. Data collection 6.7. Ethical principles 6.8. Conclusion 6.9. Revision questions and answer key 6.10. Further reading

11  7 Introduction to Quantitative Data Processing and Analysis 7.1. Preliminary observations 7.2. Raw data organization 7.3. Raw data processing 7.4. The concept of distribution 7.5. Descriptive statistics 7.6. Linear models 7.7. Basic principles of inferential statistics 7.8. Types of statistical effects 7.9. Conventional procedures for testing the effects of independent variables 7.10. Mixed linear models 7.11. Best-practices for collecting and modeling data 7.12. Conclusion 7.13. Revision questions and answer key 7.14. Further reading

12  References

13  Index

14  End User License Agreement

List of Illustrations

1 Chapter 2Figure 2.1. Illustrations of nominal, ordinal, interval and ratio scales

2 Chapter 4Figure 4.1. Examples of situations presented in Coventry et al. (2001)

3 Chapter 5Figure 5.1. Example of fictitious steps involved in simple (a) or choice (b) rea...Figure 5.2. Illustrations of eye movements during reading. The circles correspon...

4 Chapter 6Figure 6.1. Diagram of the operational hypothesis and examples of external varia...Figure 6.2. Illustrations of experimental trials in different tasks in experimen...

5 Chapter 7Figure 7.1. Histogram representing the distribution of data acquired in an exper...Figure 7.2. Normal distribution, with a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1Figure 7.3. Graphic illustrations of decision times by participant #1 and the me...Figure 7.4. Histograms representing the decision times obtained in the different...Figure 7.5. Mean decision times of participants in high and low frequency condit...Figure 7.6. Illustrations of interaction effects for a design with two independe...Figure 7.7. Reaction times distribution for participants (panel (a)) and for ite...Figure 7.8. Decision times from participants 1, 2 and 5. Each point corresponds ...

Tables

1 Chapter 6Table 6.1. Combination possibilities for 4 conditions in a Latin square designTable 6.2. Combination of independant variable modalities for creating condition...Table 6.3. List possibilities for an experiment

2 Chapter 7Table 7.1. Example of a database describing the characteristics of participantsTable 7.2a. Example of a long format database (where one row corresponds to one ...Table 7.2b. Example of a long format database (where one row corresponds to one ...Table 7.3. Examples of participants' mean decision times in the two frequency co...Table 7.4. Examples of decision time means for items, depending on their frequen...

Guide

Cover

Table of Contents

Title page

Copyright

Preface

Begin Reading

References

Index

End User License Agreement

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Introduction to Experimental Linguistics

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