Publication | Closed Access
Influence of case type, word frequency, and exposure duration on visual word recognition.
83
Citations
34
References
1995
Year
Case TypeNeurolinguisticsSemantic ProcessingVisual Word RecognitionPsycholinguisticsCognitionExposure DurationAttentionSocial SciencesWord RecognitionLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesPsychophysicsCognitive ScienceVision ResearchDistributional SemanticsSpeech CommunicationLanguage ComprehensionSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
The authors report 4 lexical decision experiments in which case type, word frequency, and exposure duration were varied. These data indicated that there is a larger mixed-case disadvantage for nonwords than for words for longer duration presentations of targets. However, when targets were presented for 100 ms (followed by a postdisplay pattern mask), a larger mixed-case disadvantage occurred for words than for nonwords. For word frequency, the data from Experiments 1, 2, and 3 revealed a slightly larger mixed- case disadvantage for higher frequency words than for lower frequency words. (There was additivity between word frequency and case type for experiment 4.) These results are consistent with a holistically biased, hybrid model of visual word recognition but inconsistent with analytically biased, hybrid models of word recognition, such as the process model (Besner & Johnston, 1989) and the interactive-activation model (McClelland & Rumelhart, 1981).
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