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| Research article summary (published 30 Aug 2007): |
The effect of the balance of orthographic neighborhood distribution in visual word recognition.
Full Abstract
The present study investigated whether the balance of neighborhood distribution (i.e., the way orthographic neighbors are spread across letter positions) influences visual word recognition. Three word conditions were compared. Word neighbors were either concentrated on one letter position (e.g.,nasse/basse-lasse-tasse-masse) or were unequally spread across two letter positions (e.g.,pelle/celle-selle-telle-perle), or were equally spread across two letter positions (e.g.,litre/titre-vitre-libre-livre). Predictions based on the interactive activation model [McClelland & Rumelhart (1981). Psychological Review, 88, 375-401] were generated by running simulations and were confirmed in the lexical decision task. Data showed that words were more rapidly identified when they had spread neighbors rather than concentrated neighbors. Furthermore, within the set of spread neighbors, words were more rapidly recognized when they had equally rather than unequally spread neighbors. The findings are explained in terms of activation and inhibition processes in the interactive activation framework.
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Author information
Author/s: Robert, Christelle (C); Mathey, Stéphanie (S); Zagar, Daniel (D);
Affiliation: Département de Psychologie, Université Bordeaux2, 3 place de la Victoire, 33076, Bordeaux Cedex, France. Christelle.Robert(-atsign-)pse.unige.ch
Journal and publication information
Publication Type: Journal Article
Journal: Journal of psycholinguistic research (J Psycholinguist Res), published in United States. (Language: eng)
Reference: 2007-Sep; vol 36 (issue 5) : pp 371-81
Dates: Created 2007/07/26; Completed 2007/10/29;
PMID: 17225193, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 12/26/2008)
Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.
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