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Taft, Marcus; Krebs-Lazendic, Lidija – Journal of Memory and Language, 2013
The way in which letters are assigned their position when recognizing a visually presented word was examined in three experiments using nonwords created by transposing the two medial consonants of a bisyllabic baseword (e.g., "nakpin," "semron"). The difficulty in responding to such "TL" nonwords in a lexical decision task was shown to be lower…
Descriptors: Syllables, Word Recognition, Alphabets, Visual Perception
White, Katherine S.; Yee, Eiling; Blumstein, Sheila E.; Morgan, James L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2013
Young word learners fail to discriminate phonetic contrasts in certain situations, an observation that has been used to support arguments that the nature of lexical representation and lexical processing changes over development. An alternative possibility, however, is that these failures arise naturally as a result of how word familiarity affects…
Descriptors: Adults, Phonetics, Familiarity, Language Processing
Tsang, Yiu-Kei; Chen, Hsuan-Chih – Journal of Memory and Language, 2013
In three priming experiments, we investigated whether the meanings of ambiguous morphemes were activated during word recognition. Using a meaning generation task, Experiment 1 demonstrated that the dominant meaning of individually presented ambiguous morphemes was reported more often than did other less frequent meanings. Also, participants tended…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Priming, Word Recognition, Morphology (Languages)
A Written Word Is Worth a Thousand Spoken Words: The Influence of Spelling on Spoken-Word Production
Burki, Audrey; Spinelli, Elsa; Gaskell, M. Gareth – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
The present study investigated the role of spelling in phonological variant processing. Participants learned the auditory forms of potential reduced variants of novel French words (e.g., /plur/) and their associations with pictures of novel objects over 4 days. After the fourth day of training, the spelling of each novel word was presented once.…
Descriptors: Spelling, Speech, Phonology, Language Processing
Chetail, Fabienne; Content, Alain – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
The processes and the cues determining the orthographic structure of polysyllabic words remain far from clear. In the present study, we investigated the role of letter category (consonant vs. vowels) in the perceptual organization of letter strings. In the syllabic counting task, participants were presented with written words matched for the…
Descriptors: Vowels, Phonemes, Language Processing, Alphabets
Newman, Rochelle S.; Sawusch, James R.; Wunnenberg, Tyler – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
Fluent speech does not contain obvious breaks to word boundaries, yet there are a number of cues that listeners can use to help them segment the speech stream. Most of these cues have been investigated in isolation from one another. In previous work, Norris, McQueen, Cutler, and Butterfield (1997) suggested that listeners use a Possible Word…
Descriptors: Cues, Speech, Acoustics, Syllables
Jones, Lara L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
Mediated priming refers to the faster word recognition of a target (e.g., milk) following presentation of a prime (e.g., pasture) that is related indirectly via a connecting "mediator" (e.g., cow). Association strength may be an important factor in whether mediated priming occurs prospectively (with target activation prior to its presentation) or…
Descriptors: Priming, Word Recognition, Language Processing, Cues
Gagne, Christina L.; Spalding, Thomas L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Although previous research has suggested that the processing of compound words involves the integration of the constituents, not much is known about what integration entails. Three experiments suggest that integration draws on both linguistic and conceptual knowledge about the constituents and the compound word; ease of processing (as reflected by…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Memory, Word Recognition
Strijkers, Kristof; Holcomb, Phillip J.; Costa, Albert – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
The present study explored when and how the top-down intention to speak influences the language production process. We did so by comparing the brain's electrical response for a variable known to affect lexical access, namely word frequency, during overt object naming and non-verbal object categorization. We found that during naming, the…
Descriptors: Evidence, Intention, Classification, Brain
Diependaele, Kevin; Dunabeitia, Jon Andoni; Morris, Joanna; Keuleers, Emmanuel – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
In three experiments we compared the performance of native English speakers to that of Spanish-English and Dutch-English bilinguals on a masked morphological priming lexical decision task. The results do not show significant differences across the three experiments. In line with recent meta-analyses, we observed a graded pattern of facilitation…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Second Languages, Word Recognition, Native Speakers
Norris, Dennis; Kinoshita, Sachiko; van Casteren, Maarten – Journal of Memory and Language, 2010
Early on during word recognition, letter positions are not accurately coded. Evidence for this comes from transposed-letter (TL) priming effects, in which letter strings generated by transposing two adjacent letters (e.g., "jugde") produce large priming effects, more than primes with the letters replaced in the corresponding position (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Language Processing, Sampling, Coding
Dijkstra, Ton; Miwa, Koji; Brummelhuis, Bianca; Sappelli, Maya; Baayen, Harald – Journal of Memory and Language, 2010
This study examines how the cross-linguistic similarity of translation equivalents affects bilingual word recognition. Performing one of three tasks, Dutch-English bilinguals processed cognates with varying degrees of form overlap between their English and Dutch counterparts (e.g., "lamp-lamp" vs. "flood-vloed" vs. "song-lied"). In lexical…
Descriptors: Semantics, Translation, Linguistics, Word Recognition
Acheson, Daniel J.; MacDonald, Maryellen C. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
Research on written language comprehension has generally assumed that the phonological properties of a word have little effect on sentence comprehension beyond the processes of word recognition. Two experiments investigated this assumption. Participants silently read relative clauses in which two pairs of words either did or did not have a high…
Descriptors: Reading Tests, Phonological Awareness, Sentences, Phrase Structure
Malins, Jeffrey G.; Joanisse, Marc F. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2010
We used eyetracking to examine how tonal versus segmental information influence spoken word recognition in Mandarin Chinese. Participants heard an auditory word and were required to identify its corresponding picture from an array that included the target item ("chuang2" "bed"), a phonological competitor (segmental: chuang1 "window"; cohort:…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Word Recognition, Mandarin Chinese, Language Processing
Kuperman, Victor; Bertram, Raymond; Baayen, R. Harald – Journal of Memory and Language, 2010
This eye-tracking study explores visual recognition of Dutch suffixed words (e.g., "plaats+ing" "placing") embedded in sentential contexts, and provides new evidence on the interplay between storage and computation in morphological processing. We show that suffix length crucially moderates the use of morphological properties. In words with shorter…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Scientific Concepts, Suffixes, Word Frequency