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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The nature of the syllabic neighbourhood effect in French
Daniel ZagarStéphanie MatheyAlix SeigneuricNadège Doignonsubject
orthographic redundancysyllabic neighbourhoodBigramSpeech recognition[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)LexiconVocabularyNeighbourhood effect[ SHS.PSY ] Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Developmental and Educational PsychologyLexical decision taskReaction TimeHumanssyllableLanguageRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineLinguisticsvisual word recognitionWord recognitionVisual PerceptionSyllabic verseFranceSyllablePsychologydescription
International audience; We investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllables mediate access to the lexicon in French visual word recognition. To do so, two lexical decision task (LDT) experiments examined the nature of the syllabic neighbourhood effect. In Experiments 1a and b, the number of higher frequency syllabic neighbours was manipulated while controlling for the first bigram. The results failed to show a pure syllabic neighbourhood effect. In Experiments 2a and b, syllabic neighbourhood and bigram frequency were factorially manipulated. The interaction showed that the syllabic neighbourhood effect was inhibitory when bigram frequency was high, whereas it was facilitatory when bigram frequency was low. Similar patterns of results were found in both the yes/no (Experiments 1a and 2a) and go/no-go LDTs (Experiments 1b and 2b), so varying task requirements of the lexical decision did not influence the effect. These findings are discussed in the context of parallel distributed processing and interactive-activation models, and suggest that orthographic redundancy properties contribute to the influence of phonological syllables
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2006-01-01 |