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Ludovic Ferrand

Researcher at University of Auvergne

Publications -  129
Citations -  7843

Ludovic Ferrand is an academic researcher from University of Auvergne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroop effect & Lexical decision task. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 123 publications receiving 7298 citations. Previous affiliations of Ludovic Ferrand include École pratique des hautes études & Blaise Pascal University.

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Lexique 2: a new French lexical database.

TL;DR: A new lexical database for French, Lexique, which includes a series of interesting new characteristics such as gender, number, and grammatical category and a metasearch engine that can be added very easily to the existing databases.
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Une base de données lexicales du français contemporain sur internet : LEXIQUE™//A lexical database for contemporary french : LEXIQUE™

TL;DR: A new lexical database of French, named Lexique, is presented, based on a corpus of texts written since 1950 which contained 31 million words, which yields 130 000 entries including the inflected forms of verbs, nouns and adjectives.
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A set of 400 pictures standardized for French: norms for name agreement, image agreement, familiarity, visual complexity, image variability, and age of acquisition.

TL;DR: French normative measures for 400 line drawings taken from Cycowicz, Friedman, Rothstein, and Snodgrass (1997) are provided, including the 260 line drawings that were normed bysnodgrass and Vanderwart (1980).
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Orthography shapes the perception of speech: The consistency effect in auditory word recognition

TL;DR: The authors found a consistency effect in auditory word perception: words with phonological rimes that could be spelled in multiple ways produced longer auditory lexical decision latencies and more errors than did words with rimes which could be written only one way.
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The time course of orthographic and phonological code activation in the early phases of visual word recognition

TL;DR: Orthographic (TL) priming and phonological (pseudohomophone)Priming were found to have distinct topographical distributions and different timing, with orthographic effects arising earlier than phonological effects.