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Browsing by Author "Hayes, J."
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How the constraints on English compound production might be learnt from the linguistic input : evidence from 4 connectionist models
Hayes, J.; Murphy, V.; Davey, N.; Smith, Pamela (2003)Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) more frequently than regular plurals (e.g. *rats chaser) (Gordon, 1985). This dissociation in inflectional morphology has ... -
Input driven constraints on plurals in English noun-noun compounds
Hayes, J.; Murphy, V.; Davey, N.; Smith, Pamela (2003)Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) more frequently than regular plurals (e.g. *rats chaser) (Gordon, 1985). This dissociation in inflectional morphology has ... -
Plural morphology in compounding is not good evidence to support the dual mechanism model
Hayes, J.; Murphy, V.; Peters, L.; Smith, Pamela; Davey, N. (2001)The compounding phenomena is considered to be good evidence to support the dual mechanism model of morphological processing (Pinker & Prince, 1992). However evidence from initial neural net modeling has shown that a single ... -
Processing English compounds in the first and second language : the influence of the middle morpheme
Murphy, V.; Hayes, J. (2010)Native English speakers tend to exclude regular plural inflection when producing English noun-noun compounds (e.g., rat-eater not rats-eater) while allowing irregular plural inflection within compounds (e.g., mice-eater) ... -
Risk assessment for people with mental health problems: a pilot study of reliability in working practice
Gale, T.M.; Woodward, A.; Hawley, C.; Hayes, J.; Sivakumaran, T.; Hansen, G. (2002)INTRODUCTION : This paper describes a pilot study of reliability in the risk assessment of people with mental health problems. Specifically, we explore the evidence for professional and gender bias in ratings, in addition ... -
Routine examination of the newborn: the EMREN study. Evaluation of an extension of the midwife role including a randomised controlled trial of appropriately trained midwives and paediatric senior house officers
Townsend, J.; Wolke, D.; Hayes, J.; Dave, S.; Rogers, C.; Bloomfield, L.; Quist-Therson, E.; Tomlin, M.; Messer, D.J. (2004)To assess the implications and cost-effectiveness of extending the role of midwives to include the routine (24-hour) examination of the healthy newborn usually carried out by junior doctors. -
The /s/ morpheme and the compounding phenomenon in English.
Hayes, J.; Murphy, V.; Davey, N.; Smith, P.; Peters, L. (2002)Compound words with irregular plural nouns in first position (e.g. mice-eater) are produced far more frequently than compound words with regular plural nouns in first position (e.g. *rats-eater), (Gordon, 1985). ... -
Why will rat's go where rats will not
Hayes, J.; Murphy, V.; Davey, N.; Smith, Pamela; Peters, L. (2002)Experimental evidence indicates that regular plurals are nearly always omitted from English compounds (e.g., rats-eater) while irregular plurals may be included within these structures (e.g., mice-chaser). This phenomenon ...