Are phonological effects fragile? The effect of luminance and exposure duration on form priming and phonological priming

Number 1282
Year 2002
Drawer 24
Entry Date 12/06/2007
Authors Frost, R., Ahissar, M., Gotesman, R. & Tayeb
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Publication Journal of Memory and Language, v. 48, pp. 346-378.
url http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Reprints/HL1282.pdf
Abstract We examined the orthographic and phonological computation of words and nonwords focusing on the pseudohomophone test in masked presentations. The priming manipulation consisted of gradually increasing or decreasing the orthographic and phonological similarity between the primes and the targets. We employed a psychophysical approach, presenting subjects with a large number of trails, while varying the parameters of exposure duration and luminance. The results suggest that phonological priming effects for brief exposure durations are robust, not fragile, and can be demonstrated for words as well as for nonwords. Moreover, the effects are not restricted to a narrow window of energy, but are revealed across a wide range of SOAs and luminance conditions. However, since the computed phonological code is initially coarse-grained, substantial phonological contrasts are required to obtain phonological effects under masked presention.
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