Results 251 to 260 of about 133,847 (309)

Recognition intent and visual word recognition

Consciousness and Cognition, 2009
This study adopted a change detection task to investigate whether and how recognition intent affects the construction of orthographic representation in visual word recognition. Chinese readers (Experiment 1-1) and nonreaders (Experiment 1-2) detected color changes in radical components of Chinese characters.
Man-Ying, Wang, Chi-Le, Ching
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Word Recognition and Word Recall

Psychological Reports, 1981
153 college students, given a 20-word spelling test, followed by a recall and then a recognition test of the words, did significantly better on the recognition test than on recall—even though the interval between learning and recognition was greater than the interval between learning and recall.
Sheldon J. Lachman, Linda K. Forsberg
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Visual Word Recognition of Single-Syllable Words.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
Speeded visual word naming and lexical decision performance are reported for 2428 words for young adults and healthy older adults. Hierarchical regression techniques were used to investigate the unique predictive variance of phonological features in the onsets, lexical variables (e.g., measures of consistency, frequency, familiarity, neighborhood size,
David A, Balota   +4 more
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Word Recognition in Presbyacusis

Scandinavian Audiology, 1990
Word recognition assessed as discrimination loss was analysed in 269 women ranging from 60 to 89 years of age. A clear relationship was found between the discrimination loss and the hearing loss (calculated as the average hearing threshold level at 1,000, 2,000, and 4,000 Hz).
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Parafoveal processing in word recognition

The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A, 2000
Two experiments investigated the degree to which properties of a word presented in the parafovea influenced the time to process a word undergoing concurrent foveal inspection. In Experiment 1, subjects viewed a set of five-letter words at a fixed point, with words in parafoveal vision varying in length, word frequency, and both the type and token ...
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Word Knowledge and Letter Recognition as Determinants of Word Recognition

1979
The recognition of words during reading implies not only that letters, or other constituent parts of words, are seen, but also that words are known. In a recognition model for words of three letters, developed by Bouma and Bouwhuis (1975), word perception is thought to be mediated both by recognition of the constituent letters in their position and by ...
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Word Meaning and Word Recognition

1983
The problem of meaning has not yet been solved in psychology. Books on psycholinguistics generally offer several proposals [e.g. Clark and Clark (1977); Foss and Hakes (1978); Glucksberg and Danks (1975)], but none of them is really satisfactory, and psychologists who want to study the meaning of words or their development in childhood are thus in a ...
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Automatic word recognition

IEEE Spectrum, 1971
Separately spoken individual words can be automatically recognized using a two-dimensional pattern of spectral density versus a nonlinear time base. The pattern for a given word differs from person to person and must be adaptively learned by the machine for each speaker.
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Visual Word Recognition

2019
Words are the building blocks of language, and visual word recognition is a crucial prerequisite for skilled reading. Before we can pronounce a word or understand what it means, we have to first recognize it (i.e., the visually presented word makes contact with its underlying mental representation).
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