M Perea, M Carreiras - Journal of Experimental Psychology …, 1998 - psycnet.apa.org
Three experiments were carried out to analyze the role of syllable frequency in lexical decision and naming. The results show inhibitory effects of syllable frequency in the lexical …
Three types of sublexical units were studied in Spanish visual word recognition: the syllable, the basic orthographic syllabic structure (BOSS), and the root morpheme. In Experiment 1 …
M Conrad, A Jacobs - Language and Cognitive Processes, 2004 - Taylor & Francis
Two experiments tested the role of syllable frequency in word recognition, recently suggested in Spanish, in another shallow orthography, German. Like in Spanish, word …
A number of studies have shown that syllables play an important role in visual word recognition in Spanish. We report three lexical decision experiments with a masked priming …
P Colé, M Annie, J Grainger - Applied psycholinguistics, 1999 - cambridge.org
The experiments presented here used a visual version of the syllable monitoring technique (Mehler, Dommergues, Frauenfelder, & Segui, 1981) to investigate the role of syllabic units …
M Carreiras, M Perea - Journal of Experimental Psychology: human …, 2002 - psycnet.apa.org
Four lexical decision experiments using a masked priming paradigm were conducted to analyze whether the previous presentation of a syllabic neighbor (a word sharing the same …
NO Schiller - … of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and …, 2000 - psycnet.apa.org
Five experiments investigated the role of sublexical units in English single word production. L. Ferrand, J. Segui, and GW Humphreys (1997) reported a priming effect that was most …
M Allen, W Badecker - Journal of Memory and Language, 2002 - Elsevier
Two cross-modal priming experiments address issues concerning the representation and processing of regular and irregular morphology in English as well as methodological issues …
DE Huber, RM Shiffrin, KB Lyle, KI Ruys - Psychological review, 2001 - psycnet.apa.org
Responding optimally with unknown sources of evidence (ROUSE) is a theory of short-term priming applied to associative, orthographic–phonemic, and repetition priming. In our …