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Risko, Evan F.; Lanthier, Sophie N.; Besner, Derek – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2011
Reading is acutely sensitive to the amount of space between letters within a string. In the present investigation, we explore the impairment caused by increasing interletter spacing when reading single words and nonwords aloud. Specifically, 2 hypotheses are tested: (a) whether increasing interletter spacing induces serial processing while reading…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Alphabets, Proximity, Context Effect
Johnson, Rebecca L.; Staub, Adrian; Fleri, Amanda M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Printed words that have a transposed-letter (TL) neighbor (e.g., angel has the TL neighbor angle) have been shown to be more difficult to process, in a range of paradigms, than words that do not have a TL neighbor. However, eye movement evidence suggests that this processing difficulty may occur on only a subset of trials. To investigate this…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Word Recognition, Language Processing, Orthographic Symbols
Hill, Jessica C. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Current models of normal reading behavior emphasize not only the recognition and processing of the word being fixated (n) but also processing of the upcoming parafoveal word (n + 1). Gaze contingent displays employing the boundary paradigm often mask words in order to understand how much and what type of processing is completed on the parafoveal…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Visual Stimuli, Word Recognition, Alphabets
Scullin, Michael K.; McDaniel, Mark A.; Shelton, Jill T.; Lee, Ji Hae – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
We investigated whether focal/nonfocal effects (e.g., Einstein et al., 2005) in prospective memory (PM) are explained by cue differences in monitoring difficulty. In Experiment 1, we show that syllable cues (used in Einstein et al., 2005) are more difficult to monitor for than are word cues; however, initial-letter cues (in words) are similar in…
Descriptors: Memory, Intention, Cues, Alphabets

Rumelhart, David E.; McClelland, James L. – Psychological Review, 1982
The duration and timing of the context is which letters occur is shown to influence the perceptibility of the target in experiments demonstrating that early on enhanced word presentations and pronounceable-pseudoword contexts increase letter perceptibility. The perceptibility of letters in strings sharing several or few letters with words is…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Context Effect, Higher Education

Richman, Howard B.; Simon, Herbert A. – Psychological Review, 1989
This study showed that the Elementary Perceiver and Memorizer (EPAM) can explain letter recognition phenomena earlier simulated by the connectionist Interactive Activation Model of word perception. EAPM, a model of learning and recognition in the form of a computer program, has previously explained many aspects of learning and perception. (TJH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Computer Simulation, Computer Software