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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Jalapeno or jalapeño: Do diacritics in consonant letters modulate visual similarity effects during word recognition?
Ana MarcetMaría Fernández-lópezHnazand GhukasyanManuel Pereasubject
ConsonantLinguistics and LanguageSpeech recognition05 social sciencesWord processingExperimental and Cognitive Psychology050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and Linguistics03 medical and health sciencesPrime (symbol)0302 clinical medicineSimilarity (psychology)Word recognitionComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSINGLexical decision taskFeature (machine learning)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyPriming (psychology)030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral Psychologydescription
AbstractPrior research has shown that word identification times to DENTIST are faster when briefly preceded by a visually similar prime (dentjst; i↔j) than when preceded by a visually dissimilar prime (dentgst). However, these effects of visual similarity do not occur in the Arabic alphabet when the critical letter differs in the diacritical signs: for the target the visually similar one-letter replaced prime (compare and is no more effective than the visually dissimilar one-letter replaced prime Here we examined whether this dissociative pattern is due to the special role of diacritics during word processing. We conducted a masked priming lexical decision experiment in Spanish using target words containing one of two consonants that only differed in the presence/absence of a diacritical sign: n and ñ. The prime-target conditions were identity, visually similar, and visually dissimilar. Results showed an advantage of the visually similar over the visually dissimilar condition for muñeca-type words (muneca-MUÑECA < museca-MUÑECA), but not for moneda-type words (moñeda-MONEDA = moseda-MONEDA). Thus, diacritical signs are salient elements that play a special role during the first moments of processing, thus constraining the interplay between the “feature” and “letter” levels in models of visual word recognition.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-05-01 | Applied Psycholinguistics |