Search results for "Word Recognition"

showing 10 items of 133 documents

Can letter position encoding be modified by visual perceptual elements?

2018

A plethora of studies has revealed that letter position coding is relatively flexible during word recognition (e.g., the transposed-letter [TL] pseudoword CHOLOCATE is frequently misread as CHOCOLATE). A plausible explanation of this phenomenon is that letter identity and location are not perfectly bound as a consequence of the limitations of the visual system. Thus, a complete characterization of letter position coding requires an examination of how letter position coding can be modulated by visual perceptual elements. Here we conducted three lexical decision experiments with TL and replacement-letter pseudowords that manipulated the visual characteristics of the stimuli. In Experiment 1,…

AdultMaleVisual perceptionPhysiologyComputer scienceSpeech recognitionExperimental and Cognitive Psychology050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicinePosition (vector)Physiology (medical)Encoding (memory)Lexical decision taskHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral PsychologyPsycholinguistics05 social sciencesRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicinePseudowordNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualReadingSpace PerceptionWord recognitionFemale030217 neurology & neurosurgeryColor PerceptionCoding (social sciences)Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006)
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Does viotin activate violin more than viocin? On the use of visual cues during visual-word recognition.

2013

The vast majority of neural and computational models of visual-word recognition assume that lexical access is achieved via the activation of abstract letter identities. Thus, a word’s overall shape should play no role in this process. In the present lexical decision experiment, we compared word-like pseudowords like viotín (same shape as its base word: violín) vs. viocín (different shape) in mature (college-aged skilled readers), immature (normally reading children), and immature/impaired (young readers with developmental dyslexia) word-recognition systems. Results revealed similar response times (and error rates) to consistent-shape and inconsistent-shape pseudowords for both adult skille…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyViolinDyslexiaYoung AdultArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Reading (process)Lexical decision taskmedicineReaction TimeContrast (vision)HumansChildSensory cueGeneral Psychologymedia_commonVisual word recognitionAnalysis of VarianceDyslexiaGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseLinguisticsPattern Recognition VisualReadingDevelopmental dyslexiaFemaleCuesPsychologyCognitive psychologyExperimental psychology
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Does Bold Emphasis Facilitate the Process of Visual-Word Recognition?

2014

AbstractThe study of the effects of typographical factors on lexical access has been rather neglected in the literature on visual-word recognition. Indeed, current computational models of visual-word recognition employ an unrefined letter feature level in their coding schemes. In a letter recognition experiment, Pelli, Burns, Farell, and Moore-Page (2006), letters in Bookman boldface produced more efficiency (i.e., a higher ratio of thresholds of an ideal observer versus a human observer) than the letters in Bookman regular under visual noise. Here we examined whether the effect of bold emphasis can be generalized to a common visual-word recognition task (lexical decision: “is the item a wo…

AdultVisual word recognitionLinguistics and LanguageComputational modelVisual PhysiologyObserver (special relativity)Stimulus (physiology)Language and LinguisticsYoung AdultPattern Recognition VisualReadingTypographyLexical decision taskHumansPsychologyPsychomotor PerformanceGeneral PsychologyCoding (social sciences)Cognitive psychologyThe Spanish Journal of Psychology
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Do transposed-letter effects occur across lexeme boundaries?

2006

A masked priming lexical decision experiment was conducted to examine whether or not assignment of letter position in a word can be influenced by lexeme boundaries. The experiment was run in Basque, which is a strongly agglutinating language with a high proportion of inflected and compound words. Nonword primes were created by transposing two nonadjacent letters that crossed or did not cross morphological boundaries. Specifically, we compared morphologically complex prime-target pairs (e.g., arbigide-ARGIBIDE) with orthographic controls (e.g., arkipide-ARGIBIDE; note that ARGIBIDE is a compound of ARGI + BIDE) and noncompound pairs (e.g., ortakila--ORKATILA) with orthographic controls (e.g.…

Agglutinative languageLexemeVerbal BehaviorExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLinguisticsRecognition PsychologyVocabularyLinguisticsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)CompoundWord recognitionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyLexical decision taskReaction TimeVisual PerceptionHumansPsychologyControl (linguistics)Priming (psychology)OrthographyLanguagePsychonomic bulletinreview
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“With a little help from my friends”: Orthographic influences in spoken word recognition

2013

Resume Dans la presente etude, une tâche de decision lexicale auditive a ete utilisee avec des mots consistants (dans la direction phonie-graphie) ayant beaucoup, ou au contraire, peu « d’amis » au sein de leur voisinage phonologique. Les mots ayant beaucoup d’amis ont conduit a des temps de decision de lexicalite plus courts que ceux en ayant peu. Ce resultat est en accord avec l’hypothese selon laquelle l’orthographe faconne la perception des mots entendus du fait d’une restructuration des representations phonologiques par les connaissances orthographiques.

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Spoken word recognitionPsychologyHumanitiesGeneral PsychologyLinguisticsL’Année psychologique
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Gaze position reveals impaired attentional shift during visual word recognition in dysfluent readers

2014

Effects reflecting serial within-word processing are frequently found in pseudo- and non-word recognition tasks not only among fluent, but especially among dyslexic readers. However, the time course and locus of these serial within-word processing effects in the cognitive hierarchy (i.e., orthographic, phonological, lexical) have remained elusive. We studied whether a subject’s eye movements during a lexical decision task would provide information about the temporal dynamics of serial within-word processing. We assumed that if there is serial within-word processing proceeding from left to right, items with informative beginnings would attract the gaze position and (micro-)saccadic eye movem…

Attentional shiftAdultkognitioAdolescentWord processingword recognitionlcsh:MedicineSocial SciencesYoung AdultsilmänliikkeetLexical decision taskReaction TimeSaccadesLearningPsychologyHumanslcsh:Sciencetietojenkäsittelyta515BehaviorMultidisciplinaryPsycholinguisticsVerbal Behaviorlcsh:RCognitive PsychologyEye movementBiology and Life SciencesExperimental PsychologyLinguisticsGazeSaccadic maskingSerial memory processingClinical PsychologyReadingWord recognitionCognitive Sciencelcsh:QSensory Perceptionlexical decision tasksWord ProcessingPsychologyCognitive psychologyResearch ArticleNeurosciencePLOS ONE
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How is Visual Recognition Entrained by Auditory Background Rhythms?

2014

AbstractRecent studies have reported that the oscillations of auditory attention entrained by a background rhythmic sequence can influence performance in visual recognition tasks. We have designed an experimental paradigm in which a visual item (either a bisyllabic word or a familiar face) is displayed on screen in two consecutive parts while a musical rhythm is played in the background. Depending on the timing conditions, the first or the second part of the item could be presented either in-synchrony or out-of-synchrony with the beats of the auditory rhythm. In a first series of experiments, participants performed a lexical decision task on bisyllabic 5-letter strings. Results show that wh…

Auditory rhythmSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlEntrainmentRhythmPerceptionWord recognitionLexical decision taskGeneral Materials ScienceVisual WordSyllabic verseVisual recognitionLevels-of-processing effectPsychologymedia_commonProcedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences
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Do Grading Gray Stimuli Help to Encode Letter Position?

2021

Numerous experiments in the past decades recurrently showed that a transposed-letter pseudoword (e.g., JUGDE) is much more wordlike than a replacement-letter control (e.g., JUPTE). Critically, there is an ongoing debate as to whether this effect arises at a perceptual level (e.g., perceptual uncertainty at assigning letter position of an array of visual objects) or at an abstract language-specific level (e.g., via a level of “open bigrams” between the letter and word levels). Here, we designed an experiment to test the limits of perceptual accounts of letter position coding. The stimuli in a lexical decision task were presented either with a homogeneous letter intensity or with a graded gra…

Cognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectBigramSpeech recognitionword recognition050105 experimental psychologyorthographic processingVisual ObjectsPerceptionperceptual factorsLexical decision task0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesControl (linguistics)lcsh:QH301-705.5computer.programming_languagemedia_commonlexical decisionCommunication05 social sciences050301 educationCell BiologySensory SystemsPseudowordOphthalmologylcsh:Biology (General)letter position codingWord recognitionPsychology0503 educationcomputerOptometryCoding (social sciences)Vision
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In Defense of Position Uncertainty

2015

The authors comments on the article "Orthographic coding in illiterates," by J. A. Dunabeitia, et al. There is a high degree of flexibility in letter-position coding during visual word recognition and reading. This phenomenon is explained based on the presence of perceptual noise in the information used for locating the positions of objects, namely, letters, across space.

Cognitive scienceVisual word recognitionPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPhenomenonOrthographic projectionPsychologyGeneral PsychologyLinguisticsmedia_commonCoding (social sciences)Psychological Science
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Short article: Does the brain regularize digits and letters to the same extent?

2009

The cognitive system does not just act as a mirror from the sensory input; instead, it tends to normalize this information. Given that letter processing seems to be much more specialized than digit processing in the cortex, we examined whether the regularization process occurs differently from digits to letters than from letters to digits: We employed a masked priming same/different experiment (e.g., probe, VESZED; prime, V35Z3D; and target, VESZED). When embedded in letter strings, digits that resemble letters (e.g., 3 and 5 in V35Z3D-VESZED) tend to be encoded in a letter-like manner, whereas when embedded in digit strings, letters that resemble digits (e.g., E and S in 9ES7E2–935732) te…

CommunicationPhysiologybusiness.industrySpeech recognitionWord processingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyGeneral MedicineNumerical digitNumeral systemPrime (symbol)Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPhysiology (medical)Word recognitionPattern recognition (psychology)PsychologybusinessPriming (psychology)Regularization (linguistics)General PsychologyQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
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