Two experiments are reported in which the processing units involved in the reading of French polysyllabic words are examined. A comparison was made between units following the maximal onset principle (i.e., the spoken syllable) and units following the maximal coda principle (i.e., the basic orthographic syllabic structure {BOSS}). In the first experiment, it took longer to recognize that a syllable was the beginning of a word (e.g., the fœ of fœtus) than to make the same judgment of a BOSS (e.g., fœt). The fact that a BOSS plus one letter (e.g., fœtu) also took longer to judge than the BOSS indicated that the maximal coda principle applies to the units of processing in French. The second experiment confirmed this, using a lexical decision t...
The current study investigated the nature of phonological codes used in visual word recognition. The...
Summary Using the Reicher paradigm and the analysis of latencies for naming four letter words, we ha...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
We investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllables mediate access to th...
This program of research sought an answer to the following question: What is the nature of the mecha...
Taft (1992) reported results supporting the idea that the "Body of the BOSS" (BOB) is an important u...
The present study addressed the issue of syllable activation during visual recognition of French wor...
According to a widespread view on functional units in word reading, the perceptual structure of prin...
A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a ...
In alphabetic writing systems, reading a word implies to identify a sequence of visual symbols (lett...
Abstract There is now a growing body of evidence in various languages supporting the claim that syll...
Many studies on the role of phonological structure in speech segmentation have used the sequence det...
One highly influential finding that suggests that syllabic units are instrumental in speech percepti...
Studies on visual word recognition have resulted in different and sometimes contradictory proposals ...
To ascertain the merits of different phonetic syllabification algorithms, their performance was comp...
The current study investigated the nature of phonological codes used in visual word recognition. The...
Summary Using the Reicher paradigm and the analysis of latencies for naming four letter words, we ha...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
We investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllables mediate access to th...
This program of research sought an answer to the following question: What is the nature of the mecha...
Taft (1992) reported results supporting the idea that the "Body of the BOSS" (BOB) is an important u...
The present study addressed the issue of syllable activation during visual recognition of French wor...
According to a widespread view on functional units in word reading, the perceptual structure of prin...
A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a ...
In alphabetic writing systems, reading a word implies to identify a sequence of visual symbols (lett...
Abstract There is now a growing body of evidence in various languages supporting the claim that syll...
Many studies on the role of phonological structure in speech segmentation have used the sequence det...
One highly influential finding that suggests that syllabic units are instrumental in speech percepti...
Studies on visual word recognition have resulted in different and sometimes contradictory proposals ...
To ascertain the merits of different phonetic syllabification algorithms, their performance was comp...
The current study investigated the nature of phonological codes used in visual word recognition. The...
Summary Using the Reicher paradigm and the analysis of latencies for naming four letter words, we ha...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...