Search results for "Lexical decision task"

showing 2 items of 122 documents

Are go/no-go tasks preferable to two-choice tasks in response time experiments with older adults?

2015

Epub ahead of print 02/11/2015 Recent research has shown that, in response time (RT) tasks, the go/no-go response procedure produces faster (and less noisy) RTs and fewer errors than the two-choice response procedure in children, although these differences are substantially smaller in college-aged adults. Here we examined whether the go/no-go procedure can be preferred to the two-choice procedure in RT experiments with older adults (i.e. another population with slower and more error-prone responding than college-aged individuals). To that end, we compared these response procedures in two experiments with older adults (Mage = 83 years): a visual word recognition task (lexical decision) and a…

medicine.medical_specialtyPSYCHOLOGY EXPERIMENTALLexical decisionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAudiology050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)PerceptionLexical decision taskmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive scienceseducationmedia_commonVisual word recognitioneducation.field_of_study05 social sciencesagingtask comparisonsResponse timeNumerosity adaptation effectGo/no goPsychologySocial psychology050104 developmental & child psychology
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The nature of the syllabic neighbourhood effect in French

2006

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 wa…

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 verseFranceSyllablePsychology
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