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The processing advantage and disadvantage for homophones in lexical decision tasks.

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory and Cognition, 2013
Studies using the lexical decision task with English stimuli have demonstrated that homophones are responded to more slowly than nonhomophonic controls.
Y. Hino   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Lexical decision and the number of morphemes and affixes

Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 2013
There has been a considerable amount of research looking at the effects of both syllable number and syllable frequency on lexical decision and word naming times. Recently, there has also been an increased interest in morphological variables, but there have been no large scale studies that have examined the role of the number of morphemes in lexical ...
John W. Adams   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

How to say "no" to a nonword: a leaky competing accumulator model of lexical decision.

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory and Cognition, 2012
We describe a leaky competing accumulator (LCA) model of the lexical decision task that can be used as a response/decision module for any computational model of word recognition.
S. Dufau, J. Grainger, J. Ziegler
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Priming by pictures in lexical decision

Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1984
Cross-form priming of words by pictures was compared to within-form priming of words by words in a lexical decision task. For prime—target pairs containing repetitions of a concept or semantically related concepts, pictures provided priming of word targets in magnitudes at least as large as the priming provided by words themselves.
openaire   +2 more sources

Pseudohomophone priming in lexical decision is not fragile in a sparse lexical neighborhood.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
In lexical decision, to date few studies in English have found a reliable pseudohomophone priming advantage with orthographically similar primes (the klip-plip effect; Frost, Ahissar, Gotesman, & Tayeb, 2003; see Rastle & Brysbaert, 2006, for a review).
Sachiko Kinoshita, Dennis Norris
openaire   +3 more sources

The lexical decision task as a measure of L2 lexical proficiency

EUROSLA Yearbook, 2006
Prior applications of the lexical decision task in second language research have either examined performance accuracy (Meara and Buxton 1987) or speed of response to familiar items (Segalowitz and Segalowitz 1993). This paper examines how well the two measures together serve to discriminate among between-group levels of proficiency and within-group ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Auditory Lexical Decision and Repetition in Children

Ear & Hearing, 2016
The objective of this study was to identify factors that may detract from children's ability to identify words they do and do not know. Factors investigated were acoustic constraints stemming from the presence of hearing loss (HL) or an acoustic competitor, and lexical constraints due to an impoverished or cluttered vocabulary.Eleven children with ...
Andrea L. Pittman, Madalyn A. Rash
openaire   +3 more sources

Lateralization effects in lexical decision tasks

Brain and Language, 1979
Abstract Subjects were timed as they judged whether items presented to them were English words or not. Comparisons were made between responses to nouns and to verbs, on the one hand, and between concrete and abstract nouns, on the other hand. No asymmetries were found.
openaire   +2 more sources

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