Major hypotheses about the processes involved in word recognition are reviewed and then assessed through four experiments. The purpose of the first experiment was to examine some basic aspects of the processing of words, pseudowords, and nonwords, and beyond that, to discover basic differences in their processing that might underlie the word advantage. The second experiment was designed to assess the contribution of whole-word and letter cluster cues to the word advantage. Finally, Experiments III and IV were focused on the question of whether the word advantage can be wholly explained in terms of response bias or sophisticated guessing. Taken together, the results of these experiments were most compatible with criterion bias models. A vers...
Speeded visual word naming and lexical decision performance are reported for 2,428 words for young a...
Reading is a complex process that draws on a remarkable number of diverse perceptual and cognitive p...
This paper investigates the effects of novel words on a cognitively plausible computational model of...
Major hypotheses about the processes involved in word recognition are reviewed and then assessed thr...
Five hypotheses were proposed and tested to account for Reicher's (1968) finding that recognition of...
This thesis was concerned to test the adequacy of criterion bias explanations of the word frequency ...
Word recognition is one of the basic processes involved in reading. In this connection, a model for ...
Four experiments consider the role of semantic category information in word identification using a s...
Lexical processing is defined as the way individual access words in the mental lexicon. Word re...
This experiment investigated the properties affecting the time taken to read individual words and to...
An activation-verification model for letter and word recognition yielded predic-tions of two-alterna...
Summary We have shown that experimental conditions and tasks modify the role played by the factors r...
Megastudies of visual word recognition—assessing large numbers of items averaged over individuals—ar...
This paper reports on a word recognition experiment in search of evidence for a word- beginning supe...
This thesis examines the degree to which lexical and nonlexical procedures for word naming represent...
Speeded visual word naming and lexical decision performance are reported for 2,428 words for young a...
Reading is a complex process that draws on a remarkable number of diverse perceptual and cognitive p...
This paper investigates the effects of novel words on a cognitively plausible computational model of...
Major hypotheses about the processes involved in word recognition are reviewed and then assessed thr...
Five hypotheses were proposed and tested to account for Reicher's (1968) finding that recognition of...
This thesis was concerned to test the adequacy of criterion bias explanations of the word frequency ...
Word recognition is one of the basic processes involved in reading. In this connection, a model for ...
Four experiments consider the role of semantic category information in word identification using a s...
Lexical processing is defined as the way individual access words in the mental lexicon. Word re...
This experiment investigated the properties affecting the time taken to read individual words and to...
An activation-verification model for letter and word recognition yielded predic-tions of two-alterna...
Summary We have shown that experimental conditions and tasks modify the role played by the factors r...
Megastudies of visual word recognition—assessing large numbers of items averaged over individuals—ar...
This paper reports on a word recognition experiment in search of evidence for a word- beginning supe...
This thesis examines the degree to which lexical and nonlexical procedures for word naming represent...
Speeded visual word naming and lexical decision performance are reported for 2,428 words for young a...
Reading is a complex process that draws on a remarkable number of diverse perceptual and cognitive p...
This paper investigates the effects of novel words on a cognitively plausible computational model of...