Results for ' repair fluency'

988 found
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  1.  1
    Rethinking (Dis)Fluency Within the Scope of Interactional Linguistics and Gesture Studies.Loulou Kosmala - 2022 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:49-66.
    The study of so-called ‘disfluency’ phenomena (uh and um, filled and unfilled pauses, self-repairs and the like) has gained a lot of attention in various fields in linguistics in the past few decades, but a majority of studies tend to be production-oriented and often disregard fundamental aspects of face-to-face communication such as interactional dynamics and gesture. This paper presents a multimodal and multilevel model of “inter-fluency”, considering different levels of analysis, mainly, talk, gesture, and interaction, by combining different theoretical (...)
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  2.  34
    The role of psycholinguistics for language learning in teaching based on formulaic sequence use and oral fluency.Yue Yu - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:1012225.
    Psycholinguistics has provided numerous theories that explain how a person acquires a language, produces and perceives both spoken and written language, including theories of proceduralization. Learners of English as a foreign language (hereafter referred to as EFL learners) often find it difficult to achieve oral fluency, a key construct closely related to the mental state or even mental health of learners. According to previous research, this problem could be addressed by the mastery of formulaic sequences, since the employment of (...)
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  3.  11
    Sartre et Benny Lévy: une amitié intellectuelle, du maoïsme triomphant au crépuscule de la révolution.Sébastien Repaire - 2013 - Paris: L'Harmattan.
    Mars 1980. Une série d'entretiens publiés par le Nouvel Observateur fait scandale. Jean-Paul Sartre, un mois avant sa mort, y révoque des pans entiers de son oeuvre, dénigrant la notion d'angoisse et reléguant l'athéisme pour s'intéresser au messianisme juif et à la résurrection des corps. Face à lui, son dernier secrétaire, Benny Lévy. Accusé par Simone de Beauvoir de manipuler Sartre, Benny Lévy offre à l'écrivain une dernière occasion de revisiter son oeuvre.
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  4.  55
    Processing fluency of the forms and sounds of Chinese characters.Siyun Liu, Xujin Zhang, Yi Ren & Qiong Yu - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (2):191-203.
    The goal of this study is to investigate whether different types of structures and lexical tones of Chinese characters cause different processing fluency. In Experiment 1, participants’ explicit affective assessments of Chinese characters with different structures, frequencies, and lexical tones were analyzed. Results indicated that participants showed explicit preferences and dispreferences to different structures and lexical tones. In Experiment 2, participants’ implicit responses to different structures and lexical tones were investigated using a metaphor experimental paradigm. Results were consistent with (...)
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  5.  12
    Fluency: A trigger of familiarity for relational representations?Talya Sadeh - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
    According to Bastin et al.’s integrative memory model, familiarity may be attributed to both entity representations and relational representations. However, the model does not specify what triggers familiarity for relational representations. I argue that fluency is a key player in the attribution of familiarity regardless of the type of representation. Two lines of evidence are reviewed in support of my claim.
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  6.  10
    Processing Fluency and Predictive Processing: How the Predictive Mind Becomes Aware of its Cognitive Limitations.Philippe Servajean & Wanja Wiese - forthcoming - Topics in Cognitive Science.
    Predictive processing is an influential theoretical framework for understanding human and animal cognition. In the context of predictive processing, learning is often reduced to optimizing the parameters of a generative model with a predefined structure. This is known as Bayesian parameter learning. However, to provide a comprehensive account of learning, one must also explain how the brain learns the structure of its generative model. This second kind of learning is known as structure learning. Structure learning would involve true structural changes (...)
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  7.  54
    Fluency and positivity as possible causes of the truth effect.Christian Unkelbach, Myriam Bayer, Hans Alves, Alex Koch & Christoph Stahl - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (3):594-602.
    Statements’ rated truth increases when people encounter them repeatedly. Processing fluency is a central variable to explain this truth effect. However, people experience processing fluency positively, and these positive experiences might cause the truth effect. Three studies investigated positivity and fluency influences on the truth effect. Study 1 found correlations between elicited positive feelings and rated truth. Study 2 replicated the repetition-based truth effect, but positivity did not influence the effect. Study 3 conveyed positive and negative correlations (...)
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  8.  53
    Fluency, Satisfaction, Truth: Reassessing James in Light of Some Contemporary Psychology.Daniel J. Brunson - 2016 - Contemporary Pragmatism 13 (1):29-47.
    A notable feature of classical American pragmatism is its close association with the birth of experimental psychology. In particular, William James’ work as a psychologist influenced, and was influenced by, his pragmatism. This paper seeks to support this reading of the relation between Jamesian psychology and pragmatism, particularly through his “Sentiment of Rationality” and the later contention that the true is the satisfactory. In addition, James’ insights are tested and expanded through reference to contemporary research on processing fluency, as (...)
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  9.  64
    The role of answer fluency and perceptual fluency as metacognitive cues for initiating analytic thinking.Valerie A. Thompson, Jamie A. Prowse Turner, Gordon Pennycook, Linden J. Ball, Hannah Brack, Yael Ophir & Rakefet Ackerman - 2013 - Cognition 128 (2):237-251.
    Although widely studied in other domains, relatively little is known about the metacognitive processes that monitor and control behaviour during reasoning and decision-making. In this paper, we examined the conditions under which two fluency cues are used to monitor initial reasoning: answer fluency, or the speed with which the initial, intuitive answer is produced, and perceptual fluency, or the ease with which problems can be read. The first two experiments demonstrated that answer fluency reliably predicted Feeling (...)
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  10.  12
    Perceptual Fluency Affects Judgments of Learning Non-analytically and Analytically Through Beliefs About How Perceptual Fluency Affects Memory.Zhiwei Wang, Chunliang Yang, Wenbo Zhao & Yingjie Jiang - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  11. Mindreading with ease? Fluency and belief reasoning in 4- to 5-year-olds.Anika Fiebich - 2014 - Synthese 191 (5):1-16.
    For decades, philosophers and psychologists have assumed that children understand other people’s behavior on the basis of Belief Reasoning (BR) at latest by age 5 when they pass the false belief task. Furthermore, children’s use of BR in the true belief task has been regarded as being ontogenetically prior. Recent findings from developmental studies challenge this view and indicate that 4- to 5-year-old children make use of a reasoning strategy, which is cognitively less demanding than BR and called perceptual access (...)
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  12.  46
    Recollection, fluency, and the explicit/implicit distinction in artificial grammar learning.Annette Kinder, David R. Shanks, Josephine Cock & Richard J. Tunney - 2003 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 132 (4):551.
  13.  69
    Perceptual fluency and lexical access for function versus content words.Sidney J. Segalowitz & Korri Lane - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (2):307-308.
    By examining single-word reading times (in full sentences read for meaning), we show that (1) function words are accessed faster than content words, independent of perceptual characteristics; (2) previous failures to show this involved problems of frequency range and task used; and (3) these differences in lexical access are related to perceptual fluency. We relate these findings to issues in the literature on event-related potentials (ERPs) and neurolinguistics.
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  14.  24
    Self-generated cognitive fluency: consequences on evaluative judgments.Ulrich von Hecker, Paul H. P. Hanel, Zixi Jin & Piotr Winkielman - 2023 - Cognition and Emotion 37 (2):254-270.
    People can support abstract reasoning by using mental models with spatial simulations. Such models are employed when people represent elements in terms of ordered dimensions (e.g. who is oldest, Tom, Dick, or Harry). We test and find that the process of forming and using such mental models can influence the liking of its elements (e.g. Tom, Dick, or Harry). The presumed internal structure of such models (linear-transitive array of elements), generates variations in processing ease (fluency) when using the model (...)
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  15.  53
    The role of answer fluency and perceptual fluency in the monitoring and control of reasoning: Reply to.Valerie A. Thompson, Rakefet Ackerman, Yael Sidi, Linden J. Ball, Gordon Pennycook & Jamie A. Prowse Turner - 2013 - Cognition 128 (2):256-258.
    In this reply, we provide an analysis of Alter et al. response to our earlier paper. In that paper, we reported difficulty in replicating Alter, Oppenheimer, Epley, and Eyre’s main finding, namely that a sense of disfluency produced by making stimuli difficult to perceive, increased accuracy on a variety of reasoning tasks. Alter, Oppenheimer, and Epley argue that we misunderstood the meaning of accuracy on these tasks, a claim that we reject. We argue and provide evidence that the tasks were (...)
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  16. Perceptual Fluency and Judgments of Vocal Aesthetics and Stereotypicality.Molly Babel & Grant McGuire - 2015 - Cognitive Science 39 (4):766-787.
    Research has shown that processing dynamics on the perceiver's end determine aesthetic pleasure. Specifically, typical objects, which are processed more fluently, are perceived as more attractive. We extend this notion of perceptual fluency to judgments of vocal aesthetics. Vocal attractiveness has traditionally been examined with respect to sexual dimorphism and the apparent size of a talker, as reconstructed from the acoustic signal, despite evidence that gender-specific speech patterns are learned social behaviors. In this study, we report on a series (...)
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  17. The Embodied Fluency Model: Uncanniness Between the Mere-Exposure Effect and Angst.Kevin Michael Stevenson - 2022 - International Journal of Theology, Philosophy and Science 11 (6):39-53.
    Human beings can be said to naturally seek familiarity in their environment for survival purposes, and this can explain why the mere-exposure effect, where being merely exposed to external factors in our environment, can increase preference for these factors. Familiarity in this sense can thus be framed as important for affect and preference formation and considered built upon both the subjective process of fluency and the objects of experience being processed. The feeling of uncanniness is often considered the opposite (...)
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  18.  48
    Relative fluency (unfelt vs felt) in active inference.Denis Brouillet & Karl Friston - 2023 - Consciousness and Cognition 115 (C):103579.
  19.  47
    Brazilian Normative Data on Letter and Category Fluency Tasks: Effects of Gender, Age, and Geopolitical Region.Izabel Hazin, Gilmara Leite, Rosinda M. Oliveira, João C. Alencar, Helenice C. Fichman, Priscila D. N. Marques & Claudia Berlim de Mello - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7:174882.
    Verbal fluency is a basic function of language that refers to the ability to produce fluent speech. Despite being an essentially linguistic function, its measurements are also used to evaluate executive aspects of verbal behavior. Performance in verbal fluency (VF) tasks varies according to age, education, and cognitive development. Neurodevelopmental disorders that affect the functioning of frontal areas tend to cause lower performance in VF tasks. Despite the relative consensus that has been reached in terms of the use (...)
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  20.  41
    Sensorimotor fluency influences affect: Evidence from electromyography.Peter R. Cannon, Amy E. Hayes & Steven P. Tipper - 2010 - Cognition and Emotion 24 (4):681-691.
  21. Effects of perceptual fluency on judgments of truth.Rolf Reber & Norbert Schwarz - 1999 - Consciousness and Cognition 8 (3):338-342.
    Statements of the form ''Osorno is in Chile'' were presented in colors that made them easy or difficult to read against a white background and participants judged the truth of the statement. Moderately visible statements were judged as true at chance level, whereas highly visible statements were judged as true significantly above chance level. We conclude that perceptual fluency affects judgments of truth.
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  22.  17
    Cognitive Factors Influencing Utterance Fluency in L2 Dialogues: Monadic and Non-monadic Perspectives.Ruiling Feng - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:926367.
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  23.  36
    Fluency does not express implicit knowledge of artificial grammars.Ryan B. Scott & Zoltan Dienes - 2010 - Cognition 114 (3):372-388.
  24.  23
    Characterizing Movement Fluency in Musical Performance: Toward a Generic Measure for Technology Enhanced Learning.Victor Gonzalez-Sanchez, Sofia Dahl, Johannes Lunde Hatfield & Rolf Inge Godøy - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Virtuosity in music performance is often associated with fast, precise, and efficient sound-producing movements. The generation of such highly skilled movements involves complex joint and muscle control by the central nervous system, and depends on the ability to anticipate, segment, and coarticulate motor elements, all within the biomechanical constraints of the human body. When successful, such motor skill should lead to what we characterize as fluency in musical performance. Detecting typical features of fluency could be very useful for (...)
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  25.  42
    Predicting Fluency With Language Proficiency, Working Memory, and Directionality in Simultaneous Interpreting.Yumeng Lin, Qianxi Lv & Junying Liang - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  26.  31
    Does fluency of face description imply superior face recognition?Alvin G. Goldstein, Karen S. Johnson & June Chance - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (1):15-18.
  27.  27
    Mediative Fluency and Futility Disputes.Samantha F. Knowlton & Joseph J. Fins - 2018 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 60 (3):373-382.
    It is generally agreed that physicians should not provide futile interventions, for the obvious reason that an intervention without utility causes harm without benefit. However, despite efforts to standardize a definition, there is a lack of universal consensus as to what constitutes “futility.” Two recent policy statements object to the terminology of futility based on the lack of a universal definition. Schneiderman, Jecker, and Jonsen object to the proposed alternative terminology of “inappropriate.” These differing opinions about the most apt terminology (...)
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  28.  53
    Fluency and belief bias in deductive reasoning: new indices for old effects.Dries Trippas, Simon J. Handley & Michael F. Verde - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  29.  27
    Processing fluency hinders subsequent recollection: an electrophysiological study.Bingbing Li, Chuanji Gao, Wei Wang & Chunyan Guo - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  30.  23
    Promoting Handwriting Fluency for Preschool and Elementary-Age Students: Meta-Analysis and Meta-Synthesis of Research From 2000 to 2020.Carmen López-Escribano, Javier Martín-Babarro & Raquel Pérez-López - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:841573.
    Handwriting is a complex activity that involves continuous interaction between lower-level handwriting and motor skills and higher-order cognitive processes. It is important to allocate mental resources to these high-order processes since these processes place a great demand on cognitive capacity. This is possible when lower-level skills such as transcription are effortlessness and fluent. Given that fluency is a value in virtually all areas of academic learning, schools should provide instructional activities to promote writing fluency from the first stages (...)
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  31.  24
    Automatic effects of processing fluency in semantic coherence judgments and the role of transient and tonic affective states.Małgorzata Godlewska, Grzegorz Pochwatko, Robert Balas & Joanna Sweklej - 2015 - Polish Psychological Bulletin 46 (1):151-158.
    Recent literature reported that judgments of semantic coherence are influenced by a positive affective response due to increased fluency of processing. The presented paper investigates whether fluency of processing can be modified by affective responses to the coherent stimuli as well as an automaticity of processes involved in semantic coherence judgments. The studies employed the dyads of triads task in which participants are shown two word triads and asked to solve a semantically coherent one or indicate which of (...)
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  32. Naming fluency on visual and verbal mnemonics for transference, recall, and categorization of secondary global studies knowledge.J. Wahl & T. Cicchelli - 1995 - Journal of Social Studies Research 19:45-50.
  33.  23
    Reading Fluency As a Predictor of School Outcomes across Grades 4–9.Lucia Bigozzi, Christian Tarchi, Linda Vagnoli, Elena Valente & Giuliana Pinto - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  34.  40
    Discussion, Collaborative Knowledge Work and Epistemic Fluency.Peter Goodyear & Maria Zenios - 2007 - British Journal of Educational Studies 55 (4):351-368.
    This paper argues for an action-oriented conception of learning in higher education: one which marries higher order learning with apprenticeship in knowledge work. It introduces epistemic tasks, forms and fluency as constructs that are useful in giving a more precise meaning to ideas about collaboration in knowledge construction. Discussion is seen as central to collaborative knowledge work and we examine the role of discussion in supporting weaker and stronger interpretations of collaborative knowledge construction.
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  35.  63
    Fluency Expresses Implicit Knowledge of Tonal Symmetry.Xiaoli Ling, Fengying Li, Fuqiang Qiao, Xiuyan Guo & Zoltan Dienes - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
  36.  10
    The Fluency Amplification Model supports the GANE principle of arousal enhancement.Claus-Christian Carbon & Sabine Albrecht - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39.
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  37. Exploiting Fluencies: Educational Expropriation of Social Networking Site Consumer Training.Lucinda Rush & D. E. Wittkower - 2014 - Digital Culture and Education 6 (1).
     
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  38. Humean critics, imaginative fluency, and emotional responsiveness: A follow-up to Stephanie Ross.Paul Guyer - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (4):445-456.
    In ‘Humean Critics: Real or Ideal?’ (BJA 48 (2008): 20-28), Stephanie Ross argues that four of Hume's five criteria for qualified critics in “Of the Standard of Taste’, namely practise, comparison, freedom from prejudice, and good sense, should be understood as conditions for improving the basic constituent of taste, namely delicacy of perception, in real critics whose judgments can be canonical or guiding for the rest of us, but that delicacy of perception needs to be supplemented by what she calls (...)
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  39.  18
    Improving the Assessment of Mild Cognitive Impairment in Advanced Age With a Novel Multi-Feature Automated Speech and Language Analysis of Verbal Fluency.Liu Chen, Meysam Asgari, Robert Gale, Katherine Wild, Hiroko Dodge & Jeffrey Kaye - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:494917.
    _Introduction:_ Clinically relevant information can go uncaptured in the conventional scoring of a verbal fluency test. We hypothesize that characterizing the temporal aspects of the response through a set of time related measures will be useful in distinguishing those with MCI from cognitively intact controls. _Methods:_ Audio recordings of an animal fluency test administered to 70 demographically matched older adults (mean age 90.4 years), 28 with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and 42 cognitively intact (CI) were professionally transcribed and (...)
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  40.  17
    Executive Functions of Swedish Counterterror Intervention Unit Applicants and Police Officer Trainees Evaluated With Design Fluency Test.Torbjörn Vestberg, Peter G. Tedeholm, Martin Ingvar, Agneta C. Larsson & Predrag Petrovic - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Executive functions represent higher order top-down mechanisms regulating information processing. While suboptimal EF have been studied in various patient groups, their impact on successful behavior is still not well described. Previously, it has been suggested that design fluency —a test including several simultaneous EF components mainly related to fluency, cognitive flexibility, and creativity—predicts successful behavior in a quickly changing environment where fast and dynamic adaptions are required, such as ball sports. We hypothesized that similar behaviors are of importance (...)
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  41.  49
    Mixed matters: fluency impacts trust ratings when faces range on valence but not on motivational implications.Michal Olszanowski, Olga Katarzyna Kaminska & Piotr Winkielman - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (5):1032-1051.
    ABSTRACTFacial features that resemble emotional expressions influence key social evaluations, including trust. Here, we present four experiments testing how the impact of such expressive features is qualified by their processing difficulty. We show that faces with mixed expressive features are relatively devalued, and faces with pure expressive features are relatively valued. This is especially true when participants first engage in a categorisation task that makes processing of mixed expressions difficult and pure expressions easy. Critically, we also demonstrate that the impact (...)
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  42.  54
    Conceptual fluency increases recollection: behavioral and electrophysiological evidence.Wei Wang, Bingbing Li, Chuanji Gao, Huifang Xu & Chunyan Guo - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  43.  28
    Truth feels easy: Knowing information is true enhances experienced processing fluency.Lea S. Nahon, Sarah Teige-Mocigemba, Rolf Reber & Rainer Greifeneder - 2021 - Cognition 215 (C):104819.
    Information is more likely believed to be true when it feels easy rather than difficult to process. An ecological learning explanation for this fluency-truth effect implicitly or explicitly presumes that truth and fluency are positively associated. Specifically, true information may be easier to process than false information and individuals may reverse this link in their truth judgments. The current research investigates the important but so far untested precondition of the learning explanation for the fluency-truth effect. In particular, (...)
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  44.  44
    What do verbal fluency tasks measure? Predictors of verbal fluency performance in older adults.Zeshu Shao, Esther Janse, Karina Visser & Antje S. Meyer - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  45.  42
    Self-generated cognitive fluency as an alternative route to preference formation.Merryn D. Constable, Andrew P. Bayliss, Steven P. Tipper & Ada Kritikos - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (1):47-52.
    People tend to prefer fluently processed over harder to process information. In this study we examine two issues concerning fluency and preference. First, previous research has pre-selected fluent and non-fluent materials. We did not take this approach yet show that the fluency of individuals’ idiosyncratic on-line interactions with a given stimulus can influence preference formation. Second, while processing fluency influences preference, the opposite also may be true: preferred stimuli could be processed more fluently than non-preferred. Participants performed (...)
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  46.  50
    SQC and the fluency hypothesis.Abdul Wahid Mir - 2012 - AI and Society 27 (3):417-420.
    Students’ Quality Circles (SQCs) are considered in the context of English Language Teaching in Pakistan, with a focus on oral expression. SQCs offer many educational benefits.
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  47.  34
    The face of fluency: Semantic coherence automatically elicits a specific pattern of facial muscle reactions.Sascha Topolinski, Katja U. Likowski, Peter Weyers & Fritz Strack - 2009 - Cognition and Emotion 23 (2):260-271.
  48.  23
    Text Reading Fluency and Text Reading Comprehension Do Not Rely on the Same Abilities in University Students With and Without Dyslexia.Hélène Brèthes, Eddy Cavalli, Ambre Denis-Noël, Jean-Baptiste Melmi, Abdessadek El Ahmadi, Maryse Bianco & Pascale Colé - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Developmental dyslexia is a specific learning condition characterized by severe and persistent difficulties in written word recognition, decoding and spelling that may impair both text reading fluency and text reading comprehension. Despite this, some adults with dyslexia successfully complete their university studies even though graduating from university involves intensive exposure to long and complex texts. This study examined the cognitive skills underlying both text reading comprehension and text reading fluency in a sample of 54 university students with dyslexia (...)
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  49.  27
    Metaphor Aptness and Conventionality: A Processing Fluency Account.Paul H. Thibodeau & Frank H. Durgin - 2011 - Metaphor and Symbol 26 (3):206-226.
    Conventionality and aptness are two dimensions of metaphorical sentences thought to play an important role in determining how quick and easy it is to process a metaphor. Conventionality reflects the familiarity of a metaphor whereas aptness reflects the degree to which a metaphor vehicle captures important features of a metaphor topic. In recent years it has become clear that operationalizing these two constructs is not as simple as asking naïve raters for subjective judgments. It has been found that ratings of (...)
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  50.  82
    Exploring “fringe” consciousness: The subjective experience of perceptual fluency and its objective bases.Rolf Reber, Pascal Wurtz & Thomas D. Zimmermann - 2004 - Consciousness and Cognition 13 (1):47-60.
    Perceptual fluency is the subjective experience of ease with which an incoming stimulus is processed. Although perceptual fluency is assessed by speed of processing, it remains unclear how objective speed is related to subjective experiences of fluency. We present evidence that speed at different stages of the perceptual process contributes to perceptual fluency. In an experiment, figure-ground contrast influenced detection of briefly presented words, but not their identification at longer exposure durations. Conversely, font in which the (...)
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