Jeffrey Witzel

List of John Benjamins publications for which Jeffrey Witzel plays a role.

This study investigates the locus of processing difficulty in English object-extracted relative clauses during both native and non-native sentence comprehension. Two L-maze experiments were conducted – one with English native speakers (n = 48) and another with highly proficient Chinese learners… read more
Witzel, Jeffrey, Samantha Cornelius, Naoko Witzel, Kenneth I. Forster and Jonathan C. Forster 2015 Testing the viability of webDMDX for masked priming experimentsPhonological and Phonetic Considerations of Lexical Processing, Jarema, Gonia and Gary Libben (eds.), pp. 169–198 | Article
The DMDX software package (Forster & Forster, 2003) is a Windows-based application that displays stimuli and records responses. Recent developments in this program have made it possible to deploy DMDX experiments over the Internet. This study evaluates the viability of the web-deployable… read more
Witzel, Naoko, Jeffrey Witzel and Yujeong Choi 2015 The locus of the masked onset priming effect: Evidence from KoreanPhonological and Phonetic Considerations of Lexical Processing, Jarema, Gonia and Gary Libben (eds.), pp. 87–100 | Article
This study investigates the masked onset priming effect (MOPE) in Korean. The results revealed facilitated naming for nonwords written in the alphabetic syllabary hangul when primes and targets shared an initial consonant-vowel (CV) syllable as well as when they shared only an initial onset (C)… read more
Witzel, Jeffrey, Samantha Cornelius, Naoko Witzel, Kenneth I. Forster and Jonathan C. Forster 2013 Testing the viability of webDMDX for masked priming experimentsPhonological and Phonetic considerations of Lexical Processing, pp. 421–449 | Article
The DMDX software package (Forster & Forster, 2003) is a Windows-based application that displays stimuli and records responses. Recent developments in this program have made it possible to deploy DMDX experiments over the Internet. This study evaluates the viability of the web-deployable… read more
This study investigates the masked onset priming effect (MOPE) in Korean. The results revealed facilitated naming for nonwords written in the alphabetic syllabary hangul when primes and targets shared an initial consonant-vowel (CV) syllable as well as when they shared only an initial onset (C)… read more