Publication | Closed Access
Reading Words and Wirds: Phonology and Lexical Access
27
Citations
19
References
1996
Year
PsycholinguisticsFrequency EffectPhonologyPhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionLexicographyLanguage StudiesList StructureLexiconHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceSpeech ProductionMorphologyPhonological AwarenessSpeech CommunicationPrinted WordsPhonology MorphologyPhonicsLexical AccessSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
Naming latency for printed words is inversely related to their frequency. Four experiments were run to test whether the naming of non-words that are homophones of words (pseudohomophones) is similarly influenced by the frequency of those words. McCann and Besner (1987) failed to find such a frequency effect for pseudohomophones when they were presented in a list of non-words. The present studies show that list structure is critical: A frequency effect occurs for pseudohomophones in a list only of homophones and in a list containing words. The list structure effect was found for three different stimulus lists and suggests that lexical access is strategic. If none of the items in a list has a lexical entry, then pronunciation may be the product of a non-lexical process. If all items have a lexical entry that may be accessed orthographically or phonologically, then pronunciation will be the product of a lexical process.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1