It is widely held that single-word lexical access is a competitive process, a view based largely on the observation that naming a picture is slowed in the presence of a distractor-word. However, problematic for this view is that a low-frequency distractor-word slows the naming of a picture more than does a high-frequency word. This supports an alternative, response-exclusion, account in which a distractor-word interferes because it must be excluded from an articulatory output buffer before the right word can be articulated (the picture name): A high, compared to low, frequency word accesses the buffer more quickly and, as such, can also be excluded more quickly. Here we studied the respective roles of competition and response-exclusion for ...
Pictures were shown with superimposed word distractors of high and low frequency. Low-frequency dist...
The present study investigated the interplay between selective inhibition (the ability to suppress s...
In the present study, we extended the classic picture–word interference paradigm by the presentation...
Whereas it has long been assumed that competition plays a role in lexical selection in word producti...
In 3 experiments, subjects named pictures with low- or high-frequency superimposed distractor words....
Item does not contain fulltextA number of recent studies have questioned the idea that lexical selec...
Semantic interference effects in the picture–word interference (PWI) paradigm have long been assumed...
The response exclusion account (REA), advanced by Mahon and colleagues, localises the distractor fre...
Disagreement exists about whether lexical selection in word production is a competitive process. Com...
How does the presence of a categorically related word influence picture naming latencies? In order t...
How does the presence of a categorically related word influence picture naming latencies? In order t...
Difficulties in saying the right word at the right time arise at least in part because multiple resp...
In the semantic priming paradigm,semantically related word-word pairings produce facilitation in nam...
Disagreement exists regarding the functional locus of semantic interference of distractor words in p...
A central issue in research on speech production is whether or not the retrieval of words from the m...
Pictures were shown with superimposed word distractors of high and low frequency. Low-frequency dist...
The present study investigated the interplay between selective inhibition (the ability to suppress s...
In the present study, we extended the classic picture–word interference paradigm by the presentation...
Whereas it has long been assumed that competition plays a role in lexical selection in word producti...
In 3 experiments, subjects named pictures with low- or high-frequency superimposed distractor words....
Item does not contain fulltextA number of recent studies have questioned the idea that lexical selec...
Semantic interference effects in the picture–word interference (PWI) paradigm have long been assumed...
The response exclusion account (REA), advanced by Mahon and colleagues, localises the distractor fre...
Disagreement exists about whether lexical selection in word production is a competitive process. Com...
How does the presence of a categorically related word influence picture naming latencies? In order t...
How does the presence of a categorically related word influence picture naming latencies? In order t...
Difficulties in saying the right word at the right time arise at least in part because multiple resp...
In the semantic priming paradigm,semantically related word-word pairings produce facilitation in nam...
Disagreement exists regarding the functional locus of semantic interference of distractor words in p...
A central issue in research on speech production is whether or not the retrieval of words from the m...
Pictures were shown with superimposed word distractors of high and low frequency. Low-frequency dist...
The present study investigated the interplay between selective inhibition (the ability to suppress s...
In the present study, we extended the classic picture–word interference paradigm by the presentation...