What is the root cause of word frequency effects on lexical decision times? W. S. Murray and K. I. Forster (2004) argued that such effects are linear in rank frequency, consistent with a serial search model of lexical access. In this article, the authors (a) describe a method of testing models of such effects that takes into account the possibility of parametric overfitting; (b) illustrate the effect of corpus choice on estimates of rank frequency; (c) give derivations of nine functional forms as predictions of models of lexical decision; (d) detail the assessment of these models and the rank model against existing data regarding the functional form of frequency effects; and (e) report further assessments using contextual diversity, a facto...
The effect of lexical frequency on language-processing tasks is exceptionally reliable. For example,...
Keuleers, Stevens, Mandera, and Brysbaert (2015) presented a new variable, word prevalence, defined ...
It has been argued that performance in the lexical decision task (LDT) does not provide a direct mea...
Word frequency is an important predictor of word-naming and lexical decision times. It is, however, ...
J. S. Adelman and G. D. A. Brown (2008) provided an extensive analysis of the form of word frequency...
ABSTRACT—Word frequency is an important predictor of word-naming and lexical decision times. It is, ...
Several recent papers have examined the functional form of frequency effects on lexical decision lat...
Word frequency is the most important known predictor of word naming and lexical decision times. It i...
Journal ArticleSubjects making lexical decisions are reliably faster in responding to high-frequency...
This study starts from the hypothesis, first advanced by McDonald and Shillcock (2001), that the wor...
Overview: The role of frequency is a long-standing issue in probing the mechanisms of lexical proces...
There is general agreement that the effect of frequency on lexical access time is roughly logarithmi...
The lexical-decision task is among the most commonly used paradigms in psycholinguistics. In both th...
In a lexical decision task (LDT) in which list composition is manipulated, a typical finding to date...
The lexical-decision task is among the most commonly used paradigms inpsycholinguistics. In both the...
The effect of lexical frequency on language-processing tasks is exceptionally reliable. For example,...
Keuleers, Stevens, Mandera, and Brysbaert (2015) presented a new variable, word prevalence, defined ...
It has been argued that performance in the lexical decision task (LDT) does not provide a direct mea...
Word frequency is an important predictor of word-naming and lexical decision times. It is, however, ...
J. S. Adelman and G. D. A. Brown (2008) provided an extensive analysis of the form of word frequency...
ABSTRACT—Word frequency is an important predictor of word-naming and lexical decision times. It is, ...
Several recent papers have examined the functional form of frequency effects on lexical decision lat...
Word frequency is the most important known predictor of word naming and lexical decision times. It i...
Journal ArticleSubjects making lexical decisions are reliably faster in responding to high-frequency...
This study starts from the hypothesis, first advanced by McDonald and Shillcock (2001), that the wor...
Overview: The role of frequency is a long-standing issue in probing the mechanisms of lexical proces...
There is general agreement that the effect of frequency on lexical access time is roughly logarithmi...
The lexical-decision task is among the most commonly used paradigms in psycholinguistics. In both th...
In a lexical decision task (LDT) in which list composition is manipulated, a typical finding to date...
The lexical-decision task is among the most commonly used paradigms inpsycholinguistics. In both the...
The effect of lexical frequency on language-processing tasks is exceptionally reliable. For example,...
Keuleers, Stevens, Mandera, and Brysbaert (2015) presented a new variable, word prevalence, defined ...
It has been argued that performance in the lexical decision task (LDT) does not provide a direct mea...