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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Can we see syllables in monosyllabic words? A study with illusory conjunctions
Daniel ZagarNadège Doignon-camusStéphanie Matheysubject
ParsingRedundancy (linguistics)media_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive Psychologycomputer.software_genreLinguisticsConjunction (grammar)PerceptionReading (process)Illusory conjunctionsSyllabic verseSyllablePsychologycomputermedia_commondescription
Mathey, Zagar, Doignon, and Seigneuric (2006) reported an inhibitory effect of syllabic neighbourhood in monosyllabic French words suggesting that syllable units mediate the access to lexical representations of monosyllabic stimuli. Two experiments were conducted to investigate the perception of syllable units in monosyllabic stimuli. The illusory conjunction paradigm was used to examine perceptual groupings of letters. Experiment 1 showed that potential syllables in monosyllabic French words (e.g., BI in BICHE) affected the pattern of illusory conjunctions. Experiment 2 indicated that the perceptual parsing in monosyllabic items was due to syllable information and orthographic redundancy. The implications of the data are discussed for visual word recognition processes in an interactive activation model incorporating syllable units and connected adjacent letters (IAS; Mathey et al., 2006).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-06-01 | European Journal of Cognitive Psychology |