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Wednesday, November 17, 2021

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PhD Research Development Autumn Programme

Runs from Tuesday, October 05 to Friday, December 10.

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Language and Learning Seminar: "The nature of the bilingual lexicon: Investigating translation priming and its predictor", Adel Chaouch Orozco, University of Reading

Language and Learning Seminar:

Speaker: Adel Chaouch Orozco, University of Reading

Title: "The nature of the bilingual lexicon: Investigating translation priming and its predictors"

Abstract:

I present a series of studies investigating the bilingual lexicon’s organisation and functioning, employing visual translation priming, one of this field’s most productive methodological tools. We assessed the contribution of individual-, word- and methodology-level factors. The first study explored the effects of second language (L2) proficiency, L2 use and word frequency in translation masked priming. The second study, employing unmasked primes, focused on investigating L2 use, word frequency, and degree of semantic overlap. The third study used distributional analyses to compare the cognitive processes recruited during masked and unmasked priming experiments. Overall, our results showed that word frequency—prime frequency in particular—is a robust predictor of translation priming. Some evidence suggests that language use plays a relevant role in the bilingual lexicon’s functioning, while the effect of L2 proficiency in our data is negligible. Further, we showed that the degree of semantic overlap modulated the priming effects. Finally, our results indicated that cognitive recruitment differs in masked and unmasked priming experiments. These findings have several implications. 1) Experiential and word-level factors should be further investigated in translation priming studies, especially treated continuously and focusing on interactions. 2) The models of the bilingual lexicon would benefit from adopting a distributed view of semantic representation. 3) Studies examining response times should include distributional analyses as they provide unique insights into the cognitive mechanisms at play.

Language and Learning Seminar convenor: Dr Marta Wesierska

Marta will email TEAMS links to Department, but you can email Marta for link too.

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How to write a good PhD thesis

The goal of any PhD is to produce a thesis, but for many this document can be a bit mysterious. Often there are questions such as: What exactly is a thesis? What should go into one? How should I set it out? What should I include? When should I start writing it? And many more.

To help answer YOUR questions, we have recruited 3 of our recent PhD graduates: Dr Eva Liu, Dr Luke Hodson, and Dr Owain Ritchie. They will all talk about their experiences with the thesis and hopefully help clarify some of the mystery surrounding the document for you.

However, for us to hold a Q+A session, naturally we need YOUR questions. Are you wondering about any of the above? Any other queries rumbling around in your head? Please post any and all questions that you have to our Padlet and we will do our best to go over them all during the session. The link to the Padlet is here: https://en-gb.padlet.com/thomasgfreeman/u45b5rux48ozxr6v

All posts are anonymous, and please don't feel that any question is too silly to ask. We'd rather you asked so that we can answer it - there's a good chance someone else is wondering about the answer too!

Regardless of whether you have any specific questions you want to ask, if you would like to attend our event then please submit the form at https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/psych/events/how_to_write_a_good_phd_thesis/ and we will send you the Teams link in due course.

Hope to see you all there!

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