This present study examined accuracy and response latency of letter processing as a function of position within a horizontal array. In a series of 4 Experiments, target-strings were briefly (33. ms for Experiments 1 to 3, 83. ms for Experiment 4) displayed and both forward and backward masked. Participants then made a two alternative forced choice. The two alternative responses differed just in one element of the string, and position of mismatch was systematically manipulated. In Experiment 1, words of different lengths (from 3 to 6 letters) were presented in separate blocks. Across different lengths, there was a robust advantage in performance when the alternative response was different for the letter occurring at the first position, compa...
International audienceThe notion that the brain achieves visual word recognition by encoding the rel...
Five hypotheses were proposed and tested to account for Reicher's (1968) finding that recognition of...
Skilled adult readers identify the first letter in a string of random consonants better than letters...
The identification of individual letters is necessary for reading words in alphabetic script (Pelli...
Letter recognition is typically faster in words than ih nonwords. In this study, we tested the word-...
Research on letter-priority effects has demonstrated that for pronounceable nonwords, non-native Eng...
International audienceThe perceptual matching (same-different judgment) paradigm was used to investi...
AbstractAccurate reading of words and text relies on reliable identification of letters in left-to-r...
Repetitions of letters in words are frequent in many languages. Here we explore whether these repeti...
Experiments with orthographic neighbors are one of the main methods to study letter processing durin...
International audienceThe ease with which printed words are recognized depends on the position at wh...
International audienceIdentifying letters and their relative positions is the basis of reading in li...
In order to recognize a written word, the relative positions of its component letters must be encode...
International audienceStarting from the hypothesis that printed word identification initially involv...
Is letter information processed in parallel or serially when readers encounter words? Kwantes and Me...
International audienceThe notion that the brain achieves visual word recognition by encoding the rel...
Five hypotheses were proposed and tested to account for Reicher's (1968) finding that recognition of...
Skilled adult readers identify the first letter in a string of random consonants better than letters...
The identification of individual letters is necessary for reading words in alphabetic script (Pelli...
Letter recognition is typically faster in words than ih nonwords. In this study, we tested the word-...
Research on letter-priority effects has demonstrated that for pronounceable nonwords, non-native Eng...
International audienceThe perceptual matching (same-different judgment) paradigm was used to investi...
AbstractAccurate reading of words and text relies on reliable identification of letters in left-to-r...
Repetitions of letters in words are frequent in many languages. Here we explore whether these repeti...
Experiments with orthographic neighbors are one of the main methods to study letter processing durin...
International audienceThe ease with which printed words are recognized depends on the position at wh...
International audienceIdentifying letters and their relative positions is the basis of reading in li...
In order to recognize a written word, the relative positions of its component letters must be encode...
International audienceStarting from the hypothesis that printed word identification initially involv...
Is letter information processed in parallel or serially when readers encounter words? Kwantes and Me...
International audienceThe notion that the brain achieves visual word recognition by encoding the rel...
Five hypotheses were proposed and tested to account for Reicher's (1968) finding that recognition of...
Skilled adult readers identify the first letter in a string of random consonants better than letters...