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Reggev, Niv; Hassin, Ran R.; Maril, Anat – Cognition, 2012
Fluency, the subjective experience of ease associated with information processing, has been shown to affect a host of judgments. Previous research has typically focused on specific factors that affect the use of a single, specific fluency source. In the present study we examine how cognitive mindsets, or processing modes, moderate fluency…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Information Processing, Cognitive Processes, Reading Fluency
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Chen, Jenn-Yeu; Li, Cheng-Yi – Cognition, 2011
The process of word form encoding was investigated in primed word naming and word typing with Chinese monosyllabic words. The target words shared or did not share the onset consonants with the prime words. The stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) was 100 ms or 300 ms. Typing required the participants to enter the phonetic letters of the target word,…
Descriptors: Priming, Syllables, Word Recognition, Chinese
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Eidels, Ami; Townsend, James T.; Algom, Daniel – Cognition, 2010
A huge set of focused attention experiments show that when presented with color words printed in color, observers report the ink color faster if the carrier word is the name of the color rather than the name of an alternative color, the Stroop effect. There is also a large number (although not so numerous as the Stroop task) of so-called…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Color, Associative Learning
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Verdonschot, Rinus G.; La Heij, Wido; Schiller, Niels O. – Cognition, 2010
The process of reading aloud bare nouns in alphabetic languages is immune to semantic context effects from pictures. This is accounted for by assuming that words in alphabetic languages can be read aloud relatively fast through a sub-lexical grapheme-phoneme conversion (GPC) route or by a direct route from orthography to word form. We examined…
Descriptors: Semantics, Scripts, Semiotics, Reading Aloud to Others
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Casini, Laurence; Burle, Boris; Nguyen, Noel – Cognition, 2009
Time is essential to speech. The duration of speech segments plays a critical role in the perceptual identification of these segments, and therefore in that of spoken words. Here, using a French word identification task, we show that vowels are perceived as shorter when attention is divided between two tasks, as compared to a single task control…
Descriptors: Vowels, Identification, Auditory Perception, Word Recognition
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Creel, Sarah C.; Aslin, Richard N.; Tanenhaus, Michael K. – Cognition, 2008
Two experiments used the head-mounted eye-tracking methodology to examine the time course of lexical activation in the face of a non-phonemic cue, talker variation. We found that lexical competition was attenuated by consistent talker differences between words that would otherwise be lexical competitors. In Experiment 1, some English cohort…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Cues, Cognitive Processes, Eye Movements
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Davis, Chris; Kim, Jeesun; Forster, Kenneth I. – Cognition, 2008
This study investigated whether masked priming is mediated by existing memory representations by determining whether nonwords targets would show repetition priming. To avoid the potential confound that nonword repetition priming would be obscured by a familiarity response bias, the standard lexical decision and naming tasks were modified to make…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Familiarity, Language Processing, Memory
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Spinelli, Elsa; Gros-Balthazard, Florent – Cognition, 2007
In a crossmodal priming experiment, visual targets (e.g. "RENARD," "fox") were auditorily primed by either an intact [l[schwa][R][schwa]na[R]] "the fox" or reduced form [l[schwa][R]na[R]] "the fox" of the word. When schwa deletion gave rise to an initial cluster that respected the phonotactic constraints of French (e.g. [lapluz] "the lawn" in…
Descriptors: French, Word Recognition, Language Acquisition, Cues
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Dunabeitia, Jon Andoni; Peream, Manuel; Carreiras, Manuel – Cognition, 2007
When does morphological decomposition occur in visual word recognition? An increasing body of evidence suggests the presence of early morphological processing. The present work investigates this issue via an orthographic similarity manipulation. Three masked priming lexical decision experiments were conducted to examine the transposed-letter…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Word Recognition, Morphology (Languages), Cognitive Processes
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Kim, Jeesun; Davis, Chris; Krins, Phil – Cognition, 2004
This study investigated the linguistic processing of visual speech (video of a talker's utterance without audio) by determining if such has the capacity to prime subsequently presented word and nonword targets. The priming procedure is well suited for the investigation of whether speech perception is amodal since visual speech primes can be used…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Task Analysis, Word Recognition, Visual Perception