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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Does Kaniso activate CASINO?: input coding schemes and phonology in visual-word recognition.
Manuel PereaJoana Achasubject
Visual word recognitionAdultVocabularymedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionPhonologyRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineVocabularyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Pattern Recognition VisualSchema (psychology)Lexical decision taskReaction TimeHumansPsychologyPriming (psychology)Perceptual MaskingGeneral PsychologyPhotic Stimulationmedia_commonTransposed letter effectCognitive psychologydescription
Most recent input coding schemes in visual-word recognition assume that letter position coding is orthographic rather than phonological in nature (e.g., SOLAR, open-bigram, SERIOL, and overlap). This assumption has been drawn – in part – by the fact that the transposed-letter effect (e.g., caniso activates CASINO) seems to be (mostly) insensitive to phonological manipulations (e.g., Perea & Carreiras, 2006 , 2008 ; Perea & Pérez, 2009 ). However, one could argue that the lack of a phonological effect in prior research was due to the fact that the manipulation always occurred in internal letter positions – note that phonological effects tend to be stronger for the initial syllable ( Carreiras, Ferrand, Grainger, & Perea, 2005 ). To reexamine this issue, we conducted a masked priming lexical decision experiment in which we compared the priming effect for transposed-letter pairs (e.g., caniso-CASINO vs. caviro-CASINO) and for pseudohomophone transposed-letter pairs (kaniso-CASINO vs. kaviro-CASINO). Results showed a transposed-letter priming effect for the correctly spelled pairs, but not for the pseudohomophone pairs. This is consistent with the view that letter position coding is (primarily) orthographic in nature.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-12-01 | Experimental psychology |