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  1. Do You Read How I Read? Systematic Individual Differences in Semantic Reliance amongst Normal Readers.Anna M. Woollams, Matthew A. Lambon Ralph, Gaston Madrid & Karalyn E. Patterson - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
  • Fine Motor Skills and Lexical Processing in Children and Adults.Rebecca E. Winter, Heidrun Stoeger & Sebastian P. Suggate - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Children’s fine motor skills link to cognitive development, however, research on their involvement in language processing, also with adults, is scarce. Lexical items are processed differently depending on the degree of sensorimotor information inherent in the words’ meanings, such as whether these imply a body-object interaction or a body-part association. Accordingly, three studies examined whether lexical processing was affected by FMS, BOIness, and body-part associations in children and adults. Analyses showed a differential link between FMS and lexical processing as a (...)
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  • An ERP Study on the Role of Phonological Processing in Reading Two-Character Compound Chinese Words of High and Low Frequency.Yuling Wang, Minghu Jiang, Yunlong Huang & Peijun Qiu - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Unlike in English, the role of phonology in word recognition in Chinese is unclear. In this event-related potential experiment, we investigated the role of phonology in reading both high- and low-frequency two-character compound Chinese words. Participants executed semantic and homophone judgment tasks of the same precede-target pairs. Each pair of either high- or low-frequency words were either unrelated or related semantically or phonologically. The induced P200 component was greater for low- than for high-frequency word-pairs both in semantic and phonological tasks. (...)
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  • A Hierarchical Model of Inhibitory Control.Jeggan Tiego, Renee Testa, Mark A. Bellgrove, Christos Pantelis & Sarah Whittle - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Lexical Effects on the Perceived Clarity of Noise-Vocoded Speech in Younger and Older Listeners.Terrin N. Tamati, Victoria A. Sevich, Emily M. Clausing & Aaron C. Moberly - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    When listening to degraded speech, such as speech delivered by a cochlear implant, listeners make use of top-down linguistic knowledge to facilitate speech recognition. Lexical knowledge supports speech recognition and enhances the perceived clarity of speech. Yet, the extent to which lexical knowledge can be used to effectively compensate for degraded input may depend on the degree of degradation and the listener’s age. The current study investigated lexical effects in the compensation for speech that was degraded via noise-vocoding in younger (...)
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  • Automatic Lexical Access in Visual Modality: Eye-Tracking Evidence.Ekaterina Stupina, Andriy Myachykov & Yury Shtyrov - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Emotions in reading: Disgust, empathy and the contextual learning hypothesis.Catarina Silva, Marie Montant, Aurelie Ponz & Johannes C. Ziegler - 2012 - Cognition 125 (2):333-338.
  • Is More Always Better for Verbs? Semantic Richness Effects and Verb Meaning.David M. Sidhu, Alison Heard & Penny M. Pexman - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • Emotion word processing: does mood make a difference?Sara C. Sereno, Graham G. Scott, Bo Yao, Elske J. Thaden & Patrick J. O'Donnell - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • Symbol superiority: Why $ is better remembered than ‘dollar’.Brady R. T. Roberts, Colin M. MacLeod & Myra A. Fernandes - 2023 - Cognition 238 (C):105435.
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  • The Clock Counts – Length Effects in English Dyslexic Readers.S. Provazza, D. Giofrè, A. -M. Adams & D. J. Roberts - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • Slower Perception Followed by Faster Lexical Decision in Longer Words: A Diffusion Model Analysis.Yulia Oganian, Eva Froehlich, Ulrike Schlickeiser, Markus J. Hofmann, Hauke R. Heekeren & Arthur M. Jacobs - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • The Bayesian reader: Explaining word recognition as an optimal Bayesian decision process.Dennis Norris - 2006 - Psychological Review 113 (2):327-357.
  • Beginning readers activate semantics from sub-word orthography.Kate Nation & Joanne Cocksey - 2009 - Cognition 110 (2):273-278.
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  • Knowing Chinese character grammar.James Myers - 2016 - Cognition 147 (C):127-132.
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  • Bilingual Language Switching: Production vs. Recognition.Michela Mosca & Kees de Bot - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  • ExGUtils: A Python Package for Statistical Analysis With the ex-Gaussian Probability Density.Carmen Moret-Tatay, Daniel Gamermann, Esperanza Navarro-Pardo & Pedro Fernández de Córdoba Castellá - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Quantity and Diversity: Simulating Early Word Learning Environments.Jessica L. Montag, Michael N. Jones & Linda B. Smith - 2018 - Cognitive Science 42 (S2):375-412.
    The words in children's language learning environments are strongly predictive of cognitive development and school achievement. But how do we measure language environments and do so at the scale of the many words that children hear day in, day out? The quantity and quality of words in a child's input are typically measured in terms of total amount of talk and the lexical diversity in that talk. There are disagreements in the literature whether amount or diversity is the more critical (...)
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  • Rules Versus Statistics: Insights From a Highly Inflected Language.Jelena Mirković, Mark S. Seidenberg & Marc F. Joanisse - 2011 - Cognitive Science 35 (4):638-681.
    Inflectional morphology has been taken as a paradigmatic example of rule-governed grammatical knowledge (Pinker, 1999). The plausibility of this claim may be related to the fact that it is mainly based on studies of English, which has a very simple inflectional system. We examined the representation of inflectional morphology in Serbian, which encodes number, gender, and case for nouns. Linguists standardly characterize this system as a complex set of rules, with disagreements about their exact form. We present analyses of a (...)
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  • Compounding as Abstract Operation in Semantic Space: Investigating relational effects through a large-scale, data-driven computational model.Marco Marelli, Christina L. Gagné & Thomas L. Spalding - 2017 - Cognition 166:207-224.
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  • Friends in Low‐Entropy Places: Orthographic Neighbor Effects on Visual Word Identification Differ Across Letter Positions.Sahil Luthra, Heejo You, Jay G. Rueckl & James S. Magnuson - 2020 - Cognitive Science 44 (12):e12917.
    Visual word recognition is facilitated by the presence of orthographic neighbors that mismatch the target word by a single letter substitution. However, researchers typically do not consider where neighbors mismatch the target. In light of evidence that some letter positions are more informative than others, we investigate whether the influence of orthographic neighbors differs across letter positions. To do so, we quantify the number of enemies at each letter position (how many neighbors mismatch the target word at that position). Analyses (...)
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  • Sensitivity to emotion information in children’s lexical processing.Tatiana C. Lund, David M. Sidhu & Penny M. Pexman - 2019 - Cognition 190 (C):61-71.
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  • Aging and the optimal viewing position effect in Chinese.Pingping Liu, Danlu Liu, Buxin Han & Kevin B. Paterson - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • Psychocentricity and participant profiles: implications for lexical processing among multilinguals.Gary Libben, Kaitlin Curtiss & Silke Weber - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  • An Extension of a Parallel‐Distributed Processing Framework of Reading Aloud in Japanese: Human Nonword Reading Accuracy Does Not Require a Sequential Mechanism.Kenji Ikeda, Taiji Ueno, Yuichi Ito, Shinji Kitagami & Jun Kawaguchi - 2017 - Cognitive Science 41 (S6):1288-1317.
    Humans can pronounce a nonword. Some researchers have interpreted this behavior as requiring a sequential mechanism by which a grapheme-phoneme correspondence rule is applied to each grapheme in turn. However, several parallel-distributed processing models in English have simulated human nonword reading accuracy without a sequential mechanism. Interestingly, the Japanese psycholinguistic literature went partly in the same direction, but it has since concluded that a sequential parsing mechanism is required to reproduce human nonword reading accuracy. In this study, by manipulating the (...)
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  • The Self-Organization of a Spoken Word.John G. Holden & Srinivasan Rajaraman - 2012 - Frontiers in Psychology 3.
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  • Dispersion of response times reveals cognitive dynamics.John G. Holden, Guy C. Van Orden & Michael T. Turvey - 2009 - Psychological Review 116 (2):318-342.
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  • On the Connection Between Language Change and Language Processing.Peter Hendrix, Ching Chu Sun, Henry Brighton & Andreas Bender - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (12):e13384.
    Previous studies provided evidence for a connection between language processing and language change. We add to these studies with an exploration of the influence of lexical-distributional properties of words in orthographic space, semantic space, and the mapping between orthographic and semantic space on the probability of lexical extinction. Through a binomial linear regression analysis, we investigated the probability of lexical extinction by the first decade of the twenty-first century (2000s) for words that existed in the first decade of the nineteenth-century (...)
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  • Get rich quick: The signal to respond procedure reveals the time course of semantic richness effects during visual word recognition.Ian S. Hargreaves & Penny M. Pexman - 2014 - Cognition 131 (2):216-242.
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  • Cross-Linguistic Word Recognition Development Among Chinese Children: A Multilevel Linear Mixed-Effects Modeling Approach.Connie Qun Guan & Scott H. Fraundorf - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    The effects of psycholinguistic variables on reading development are critical to the evaluation of theories about the reading system. Although we know that the development of reading depends on both individual differences (endogenous) and item-level effects (exogenous), developmental research has focused mostly on average-level performance, ignoring individual differences. We investigated how the development of word recognition in Chinese children in both Chinese and English is affected by (a) item-level, exogenous effects (word frequency, radical consistency, and curricular grade level); (b) subject-level, (...)
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  • Facilitatory Effects of Multi-Word Units in Lexical Processing and Word Learning: A Computational Investigation.Robert Grimm, Giovanni Cassani, Steven Gillis & Walter Daelemans - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  • Accessibility and Historical Change: An Emergent Cluster Led Uncles and Aunts to Become Aunts and Uncles.Adele E. Goldberg & Crystal Lee - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    There are times when a curiously odd relic of language presents us with a thread, which when pulled, reveals deep and general facts about human language. This paper unspools such a case. Prior to 1930, English speakers uniformly preferred male-before-female word order in conjoined nouns such asuncles and aunts; nephews and nieces; men and women. Since then, at least a half dozen items have systematically reversed their preferred order (e.g.,aunts and uncles, nieces and nephews) while others have not (men and (...)
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  • Semantic Richness Effects in Spoken Word Recognition: A Lexical Decision and Semantic Categorization Megastudy.Winston D. Goh, Melvin J. Yap, Mabel C. Lau, Melvin M. R. Ng & Luuan-Chin Tan - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
  • Drifting through Basic Subprocesses of Reading: A Hierarchical Diffusion Model Analysis of Age Effects on Visual Word Recognition.Eva Froehlich, Johanna Liebig, Johannes C. Ziegler, Mario Braun, Ulman Lindenberger, Hauke R. Heekeren & Arthur M. Jacobs - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • Must analysis of meaning follow analysis of form? A time course analysis.Laurie B. Feldman, Petar Milin, Kit W. Cho, Fermín Moscoso del Prado Martín & Patrick A. O’Connor - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  • Freeze or flee? Negative stimuli elicit selective responding.Zachary Estes & Michelle Verges - 2008 - Cognition 108 (2):557-565.
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  • Feature Statistics Modulate the Activation of Meaning During Spoken Word Processing.Barry J. Devereux, Kirsten I. Taylor, Billi Randall, Jeroen Geertzen & Lorraine K. Tyler - 2016 - Cognitive Science 40 (2):325-350.
    Understanding spoken words involves a rapid mapping from speech to conceptual representations. One distributed feature-based conceptual account assumes that the statistical characteristics of concepts’ features—the number of concepts they occur in and likelihood of co-occurrence —determine conceptual activation. To test these claims, we investigated the role of distinctiveness/sharedness and correlational strength in speech-to-meaning mapping, using a lexical decision task and computational simulations. Responses were faster for concepts with higher sharedness, suggesting that shared features are facilitatory in tasks like lexical decision (...)
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  • The Interaction Between Phonological and Semantic Processing in Reading Chinese Characters.Min Dang, Rui Zhang, Xiaojuan Wang & Jianfeng Yang - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Division of Labor in Vocabulary Structure: Insights From Corpus Analyses.Morten H. Christiansen & Padraic Monaghan - 2016 - Topics in Cognitive Science 8 (3):610-624.
    Psychologists have used experimental methods to study language for more than a century. However, only with the recent availability of large-scale linguistic databases has a more complete picture begun to emerge of how language is actually used, and what information is available as input to language acquisition. Analyses of such “big data” have resulted in reappraisals of key assumptions about the nature of language. As an example, we focus on corpus-based research that has shed new light on the arbitrariness of (...)
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  • Task modulation of brain responses in visual word recognition as studied using EEG/MEG and fMRI.Y. Chen, M. H. Davis, F. Pulvermüller & O. Hauk - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  • Competition and cooperation among similar representations: Toward a unified account of facilitative and inhibitory effects of lexical neighbors.Qi Chen & Daniel Mirman - 2012 - Psychological Review 119 (2):417-430.
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  • Neural networks underlying contributions from semantics in reading aloud.Olga Boukrina & William W. Graves - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  • Semantic memory and creativity: the costs and benefits of semantic memory structure in generating original ideas.Roger E. Beaty, Yoed N. Kenett, Richard W. Hass & Daniel L. Schacter - 2023 - Thinking and Reasoning 29 (2):305-339.
    Despite its theoretical importance, little is known about how semantic memory structure facilitates and constrains creative idea generation. We examine whether the semantic richness of a concept has both benefits and costs to creative idea generation. Specifically, we tested whether cue set size—an index of semantic richness reflecting the average number of elements associated with a given concept—impacts the quantity (fluency) and quality (originality) of responses generated during the Alternate Uses Task (AUT). Across four studies, we show that low-association, sparse, (...)
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  • An amorphous model for morphological processing in visual comprehension based on naive discriminative learning.R. Harald Baayen, Petar Milin, Dusica Filipović Đurđević, Peter Hendrix & Marco Marelli - 2011 - Psychological Review 118 (3):438-481.
  • Morphological Processing as We Know It: An Analytical Review of Morphological Effects in Visual Word Identification.Simona Amenta & Davide Crepaldi - 2012 - Frontiers in Psychology 3.
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  • Error, error everywhere: A look at megastudies of word reading.Daragh E. Sibley, Christopher T. Kello & Mark S. Seidenberg - 2009 - In N. A. Taatgen & H. van Rijn (eds.), Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. pp. 1036--1041.
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