Two experiments are reported that examine the influence of a given word's ortllographic neighbours (orthographically similar words) on the recognition and pronunciation of that word. In Experiment 1 (lexical decision) neighbourhood frequency as opposed to stimulus-word frequency was shown to have a strollg influen ce on recognition Iatencies and errors. Words with at least olle higher.frequency lIeighbour took longer to recognile and resulted in more errors than words with no higher-frequency neighbours. Increasing the number of higher.fre(luency neighbours, however, was shown not to increase interference further. Interference was also shown to be independent of the position of letter change between the stimulus word and its higher-frequenc...
International audienceWe investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllable...
International audienceWe investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllable...
International audienceIn three lexical decision experiments and one progressive demasking experiment...
Two experiments are reported that examine the influence of a given word's ortllographic neighbours (...
Two experiments are reported that examine the influence of a given word's ortllographic neighbours (...
Two lexical decision experiments, using words that were selected and closely matched on several crit...
The present study investigated whether the balance of neighborhood distribution (i.e., the way ortho...
The present study investigated whether the balance of neighborhood distribution (i.e., the way ortho...
A growing body of research suggests that visual word recognition is error-prone, and that errors may...
A growing body of research suggests that visual word recognition is error-prone, and that errors may...
A word from a dense neighborhood is often read aloud faster than a word from a sparse neighborhood. ...
The present study investigated whether the balance of neighborhood distribution (i.e., the way ortho...
In three lexical decision experiments and one progressive demasking experiment, performance on low-f...
International audienceThe present study investigated phonological and orthographic neighborhood effe...
International audienceThe present study investigated phonological and orthographic neighborhood effe...
International audienceWe investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllable...
International audienceWe investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllable...
International audienceIn three lexical decision experiments and one progressive demasking experiment...
Two experiments are reported that examine the influence of a given word's ortllographic neighbours (...
Two experiments are reported that examine the influence of a given word's ortllographic neighbours (...
Two lexical decision experiments, using words that were selected and closely matched on several crit...
The present study investigated whether the balance of neighborhood distribution (i.e., the way ortho...
The present study investigated whether the balance of neighborhood distribution (i.e., the way ortho...
A growing body of research suggests that visual word recognition is error-prone, and that errors may...
A growing body of research suggests that visual word recognition is error-prone, and that errors may...
A word from a dense neighborhood is often read aloud faster than a word from a sparse neighborhood. ...
The present study investigated whether the balance of neighborhood distribution (i.e., the way ortho...
In three lexical decision experiments and one progressive demasking experiment, performance on low-f...
International audienceThe present study investigated phonological and orthographic neighborhood effe...
International audienceThe present study investigated phonological and orthographic neighborhood effe...
International audienceWe investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllable...
International audienceWe investigated whether and how sublexical units such as phonological syllable...
International audienceIn three lexical decision experiments and one progressive demasking experiment...