Reading aloud is faster when target words/nonwords are preceded by masked prime words/nonwords that share their first sound with the target (e.g., save-SINK) compared to when primes and targets are unrelated to each other (e.g., farm-SINK). This empirical phenomenon is the masked onset priming effect (MOPE) and is known to be due to serial left-to-right processing of the prime by a sublexical reading mechanism. However, the literature in this domain lacks a critical experiment. It is possible that when primes are real words their orthographic/phonological representations are activated in parallel and holistically during prime presentation, so any phoneme overlap between primes and targets (and not just initial-phoneme overlap) could facilit...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
We examined if cross-modal priming (print to speech) was greater for participants who were aware of ...
The masked onset priming effect (MOPE) was first defined by Forster and Davis (1991) as the finding ...
The masked onset priming effect (MOPE) refers to the empirical finding that target naming is faster ...
When a target word is preceded by a masked prime which has the same onset as the target, naming is f...
Two experiments investigated whether priming due to a match in just the onset between a masked prime...
The masked onset priming effect refers to the finding that in word naming, relative to an all-letter...
Dual-route theories of reading posit that a sublexical reading mechanism that operates serially and ...
Prior evidence for early activity in Broca’s area during reading may reflect fast access to articula...
Prior evidence for early activity in Broca’s area during reading may reflect fast access to articula...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined priming effects where primes were formed by ...
Item does not contain fulltextIn masked onset priming (MOPE) there is an overlap between prime and t...
Since it was introduced in Forster and Davis (1984), masked priming has been widely adopted in the p...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
We examined if cross-modal priming (print to speech) was greater for participants who were aware of ...
The masked onset priming effect (MOPE) was first defined by Forster and Davis (1991) as the finding ...
The masked onset priming effect (MOPE) refers to the empirical finding that target naming is faster ...
When a target word is preceded by a masked prime which has the same onset as the target, naming is f...
Two experiments investigated whether priming due to a match in just the onset between a masked prime...
The masked onset priming effect refers to the finding that in word naming, relative to an all-letter...
Dual-route theories of reading posit that a sublexical reading mechanism that operates serially and ...
Prior evidence for early activity in Broca’s area during reading may reflect fast access to articula...
Prior evidence for early activity in Broca’s area during reading may reflect fast access to articula...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined priming effects where primes were formed by ...
Item does not contain fulltextIn masked onset priming (MOPE) there is an overlap between prime and t...
Since it was introduced in Forster and Davis (1984), masked priming has been widely adopted in the p...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
International audienceLexical decision latencies to word targets presented either visually or audito...
We examined if cross-modal priming (print to speech) was greater for participants who were aware of ...