NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Risse, Sarah; Kliegl, Reinhold – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
During reading information is acquired from word(s) beyond the word that is currently looked at. It is still an open question whether such parafoveal information can influence the current viewing of a word, and if so, whether such parafoveal-on-foveal effects are attributable to distributed processing or to mislocated fixations which occur when…
Descriptors: Evidence, Familiarity, Word Frequency, Reading
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Allen, Philip A.; Smith, Albert F.; Lien, Mei-Ching; Grabbe, Jeremy; Murphy, Martin D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
The authors report a lexical decision experiment designed to determine whether activation is the locus of the word-frequency effect. K. R. Paap and L. S. Johansen (1994) reported that word frequency did not affect lexical decisions when exposure durations were brief; they accounted for this by proposing that data-limited conditions prevented…
Descriptors: Word Frequency, Lexicology, Language Processing, Experiments
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Reynolds, Michael; Besner, Derek – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The present experiments tested the claim that phonological recoding occurs "automatically" by assessing whether it uses central attention in the context of the psychological refractory period paradigm. Task 1 was a tone discrimination task and Task 2 was reading aloud. The joint effects of long-lag word repetition priming and stimulus onset…
Descriptors: Phonology, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Auditory Discrimination, Orthographic Symbols
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Sears, Christopher R.; Campbell, Crystal R.; Lupker, Stephen J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
What is the effect of a word's higher frequency neighbors on its identification time? According to activation-based models of word identification (J. Grainger & A. M. Jacobs, 1996; J. L. McClelland & D. E. Rumelhart, 1981), words with higher frequency neighbors will be processed more slowly than words without higher frequency neighbors because of…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Identification, Word Frequency, Models
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bruder, Gail A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1978
Three experiments assessed the effect of visual familiarity of words on "same-different" reaction times (RTs) in a simultaneous-matching task. All three studies showed visual familiarity to be responsible for differences in slope over sequence length between words and nonwords. (Editor/RK)
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Experiments, Letters (Alphabet), Psychological Studies