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Penny M Pexman
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Presenting your findings
AAM Nicol, PM Pexman
Washington, DC,: American Psychological Association, 1999
420*1999
There are many ways to be rich: Effects of three measures of semantic richness on visual word recognition
PM Pexman, IS Hargreaves, PD Siakaluk, GE Bodner, J Pope
Psychonomic bulletin & review 15, 161-167, 2008
2772008
Context incongruity and irony processing
SL Ivanko, PM Pexman
Discourse processes 35 (3), 241-279, 2003
2582003
Five mechanisms of sound symbolic association
DM Sidhu, PM Pexman
Psychonomic bulletin & review 25, 1619-1643, 2018
2522018
It's fascinating research: The cognition of verbal irony
PM Pexman
Current Directions in Psychological Science 17 (4), 286-290, 2008
2432008
The impact of feedback semantics in visual word recognition: Number-of-features effects in lexical decision and naming tasks
PM Pexman, SJ Lupker, Y Hino
Psychonomic bulletin & review 9 (3), 542-549, 2002
2372002
Homophone effects in lexical decision.
PM Pexman, SJ Lupker, D Jared
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 27 (1), 139, 2001
2212001
Children's perceptions of the social functions of verbal irony
M Harris, PM Pexman
Discourse Processes 36 (3), 147-165, 2003
2192003
Ambiguity and synonymy effects in lexical decision, naming, and semantic categorization tasks: interactions between orthography, phonology, and semantics.
Y Hino, SJ Lupker, PM Pexman
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 28 (4), 686, 2002
2172002
Developing embodied cognition: Insights from children’s concepts and language processing
M Wellsby, PM Pexman
Frontiers in psychology 5, 506, 2014
2102014
How do typically developing children grasp the meaning of verbal irony?
PM Pexman, M Glenwright
Journal of Neurolinguistics 20 (2), 178-196, 2007
2012007
Does sarcasm always sting? Investigating the impact of ironic insults and ironic compliments
PM Pexman, KM Olineck
Discourse Processes 33 (3), 199-217, 2002
1972002
Discourse factors that influence online reading of metaphor and irony
PM Pexman, TR Ferretti, AN Katz
Discourse Processes 29 (3), 201-222, 2000
189*2000
Evidence for the activation of sensorimotor information during visual word recognition: The body–object interaction effect
PD Siakaluk, PM Pexman, L Aguilera, WJ Owen, CR Sears
Cognition 106 (1), 433-443, 2008
1882008
Is more always better? Effects of semantic richness on lexical decision, speeded pronunciation, and semantic classification
MJ Yap, SE Tan, PM Pexman, IS Hargreaves
Psychonomic bulletin & review 18, 742-750, 2011
1832011
An abundance of riches: Cross-task comparisons of semantic richness effects in visual word recognition
MJ Yap, PM Pexman, M Wellsby, IS Hargreaves, MJ Huff
Frontiers in human neuroscience 6, 72, 2012
1792012
Does irony go better with friends?
PM Pexman, MT Zvaigzne
Metaphor and symbol 19 (2), 143-163, 2004
1792004
Neural correlates of concreteness in semantic categorization
PM Pexman, IS Hargreaves, JD Edwards, LC Henry, BG Goodyear
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 19 (8), 1407-1419, 2007
1782007
Interpreting figurative statements: Speaker occupation can change metaphor to irony
AN Katz, PM Pexman
Metaphor and Symbol 12 (1), 19-41, 1997
1771997
Number-of-features effects and semantic processing
PM Pexman, GG Holyk, MH Monfils
Memory & Cognition 31, 842-855, 2003
1632003
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