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Phonological ambiguity impairs identity priming in naming and lexical decision
Oleh:
Urosevic, Zoran
;
Savic, Milan
;
Turvey, Michael T.
;
Lukatela, G.
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Journal of Memory and Language (Full Text) vol. 36 no. 3 (Oct. 1997)
,
page 360-381.
Fulltext:
36_03_Lukatela_Savic_Urosevic_Turvey.pdf
(183.62KB)
Ketersediaan
Perpustakaan PKBB
Nomor Panggil:
405/JML/36
Non-tandon:
tidak ada
Tandon:
1
Lihat Detail Induk
Isi artikel
The priming of a visually presented word by itself means that all representations activated by the prime-orthographic, phonological, semantic-are of direct relevance to the processing of the target. The phonological coherence hypothesis (e.g., Van Orden & Goldinger, 1994) suggests, however, that the major constraint on the identity prime's influence is the time needed to achieve a stable phonological code. Serbo-Croatian words such as XAREM (Cyrillic) and ROBOT (Roman) support two phonological codes, one corresponding to the word and one to a nonword. The nonwords XAREM and ROEOT composed from mixed Roman and Cyrillic letters have single phonological codes corresponding to the word readings of XAPEM and ROBOT. With prime-target SOAs < 70 ms, the target was primed by the nonword better than by itself in both naming and lexical decision tasks. At an SOA of 250 ms, the nonword and the identity prime primed equally. Discussion focused on the primacy of phonological codes in visual word recognition. @ 1997 Academic Press
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