When a speaker names an object using a gender-marked pronominal form, the referent word corresponding to the target object has to be selected in order to access the grammatical gender. By contrast, the phonological content of the referent word is not needed. In two picture-naming interference experiments we explored whether the lexical selection of a referent word is affected by its phonological properties. In Experiment 1, Spanish participants named pictures using a sentence with a noun or a pronoun while ignoring words semantically or phonologically related. The results showed a semantic interference effect and a Phonological Facilitation Effect (PFE) in both type of utterances. In Experiment 2 the PFE was replicated with Italian particip...
In four experiments, participants named target pictures that were accompanied by distractor pictures...
Masked priming was used to study the locus of the semantic interference effect. This effect was stud...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preceding discours...
With the picture-word interference paradigm, four different effects have been observed in bare noun ...
In three experiments we investigated the locus of the frequency effect in lexical access and the mec...
Speakers can refer to objects and other entities by nouns or pronouns. The present article investiga...
Item does not contain fulltextSpeakers can refer to objects and other entities by nouns or pronouns....
Most current models of language production assume that information about gender is selected only in ...
International audienceThe analysis of speech error corpora in various gender-marked languages has sh...
International audienceThe analysis of speech error corpora in various gender-marked languages has sh...
Masked priming was used to study the locus of the semantic interference effect. This effect was stud...
The interacting effects of sentence context and grammatical gender on lexical access were investigat...
In four experiments, participants named target pictures that were accompanied by distractor pictures...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
In four experiments, participants named target pictures that were accompanied by distractor pictures...
Masked priming was used to study the locus of the semantic interference effect. This effect was stud...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preceding discours...
With the picture-word interference paradigm, four different effects have been observed in bare noun ...
In three experiments we investigated the locus of the frequency effect in lexical access and the mec...
Speakers can refer to objects and other entities by nouns or pronouns. The present article investiga...
Item does not contain fulltextSpeakers can refer to objects and other entities by nouns or pronouns....
Most current models of language production assume that information about gender is selected only in ...
International audienceThe analysis of speech error corpora in various gender-marked languages has sh...
International audienceThe analysis of speech error corpora in various gender-marked languages has sh...
Masked priming was used to study the locus of the semantic interference effect. This effect was stud...
The interacting effects of sentence context and grammatical gender on lexical access were investigat...
In four experiments, participants named target pictures that were accompanied by distractor pictures...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
In four experiments, participants named target pictures that were accompanied by distractor pictures...
Masked priming was used to study the locus of the semantic interference effect. This effect was stud...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preceding discours...