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  1. On the Dissociation of Word/Nonword Repetition Effects in Lexical Decision: An Evidence Accumulation Account.Manuel Perea, Ana Marcet, Marta Vergara-Martínez & Pablo Gomez - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • A Computational and Empirical Investigation of Graphemes in Reading.Conrad Perry, Johannes C. Ziegler & Marco Zorzi - 2013 - Cognitive Science 37 (5):800-828.
    It is often assumed that graphemes are a crucial level of orthographic representation above letters. Current connectionist models of reading, however, do not address how the mapping from letters to graphemes is learned. One major challenge for computational modeling is therefore developing a model that learns this mapping and can assign the graphemes to linguistically meaningful categories such as the onset, vowel, and coda of a syllable. Here, we present a model that learns to do this in English for strings (...)
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  • “Shallow Draughts Intoxicate the Brain”: Lessons from Cognitive Science for Cognitive Neuropsychology.Karalyn Patterson & David C. Plaut - 2009 - Topics in Cognitive Science 1 (1):39-58.
    This article presents a sobering view of the discipline of cognitive neuropsychology as practiced over the last three or four decades. Our judgment is that, although the study of abnormal cognition resulting from brain injury or disease in previously normal adults has produced a catalogue of fascinating and highly selective deficits, it has yielded relatively little advance in understanding how the brain accomplishes its cognitive business. We question the wisdom of the following three “choices” in mainstream cognitive neuropsychology: (a) single‐case (...)
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  • Semantic preview benefit and cost: Evidence from parafoveal fast-priming paradigm.Jinger Pan, Ming Yan & Jochen Laubrock - 2020 - Cognition 205 (C):104452.
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  • Where are emotions in words? Functional localization of valence effects in visual word recognition.Marina Palazova - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  • The emergence of word-internal repetition through iterated learning: Explaining the mismatch between learning biases and language design.Mitsuhiko Ota, Aitor San José & Kenny Smith - 2021 - Cognition 210 (C):104585.
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  • Reading aloud and the question of intent.Shannon O’Malley & Derek Besner - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (3):1298-1310.
    Must readers intend to process a word to activate various levels of representation, or is such processing simply triggered by the presentation of a word ? This issue was addressed via the use of Besner and Care’s Task Set paradigm. On each trial a cue, which indicated which of two tasks to perform appeared either before the target, or at the same time as the target. If subjects can process the target while preparing a task set, then the effect of (...)
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  • Lexical processing while deciding what task to perform: Reading aloud in the context of the task set paradigm.Shannon O’Malley & Derek Besner - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (4):1594-1603.
    The results of two experiments provide the first direct demonstration that subjects can process a word lexically despite concurrently being engaged in decoding a task cue telling them which of two tasks to perform. These results, taken together with others, point to qualitative differences between the mind‘s ability to engage in lexical versus sublexical processing during the time they are engaged with other tasks. The emerging picture is one in which some form of resource plays little role during lexical processing (...)
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  • Orthographic Reading Deficits in Dyslexic Japanese Children: Examining the Transposed-Letter Effect in the Color-Word Stroop Paradigm.Shino Ogawa, Masahiro Shibasaki, Tomoko Isomura & Nobuo Masataka - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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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 Impact of Different Writing Systems on Children’s Spelling Error Profiles: Alphabetic, Akshara, and Hanzi Cases.Beth A. O’Brien, Malikka Begum Habib Mohamed, Nur Artika Arshad & Nicole Cybil Lim - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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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.
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  • Love thy neighbor: Facilitation and inhibition in the competition between parallel predictions.Tal Ness & Aya Meltzer-Asscher - 2021 - Cognition 207:104509.
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  • How Orthography Modulates Morphological Priming: Subliminal Kanji Activation in Japanese.Yoko Nakano, Yu Ikemoto, Gunnar Jacob & Harald Clahsen - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • Lexical frequency effects on articulation: a comparison of picture naming and reading aloud.Petroula Mousikou & Kathleen Rastle - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • The experience of reading.Alan Tonnies Moore & Eric Schwitzgebel - 2018 - Consciousness and Cognition 62 (C):57-68.
    What do people consciously experience when they read? There has been almost no rigorous research on this question, and opinions diverge radically among both philosophers and psychologists. We describe three studies of the phenomenology of reading and its relationship to memory of textual detail and general cognitive abilities. We find three main results. First, there is substantial variability in reports about reading experience, both within and between participants. Second, reported reading experience varies with passage type: passages with dialogue prompted increased (...)
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  • Phonological parafoveal pre-processing in children reading English sentences.Sara V. Milledge, Chuanli Zang, Simon P. Liversedge & Hazel I. Blythe - 2022 - Cognition 225 (C):105141.
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  • The causal structure of mechanisms.Peter Menzies - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 43 (4):796-805.
    Recently, a number of philosophers of science have claimed that much explanation in the sciences, especially in the biomedical and social sciences, is mechanistic explanation. I argue the account of mechanistic explanation provided in this tradition has not been entirely satisfactory, as it has neglected to describe in complete detail the crucial causal structure of mechanistic explanation. I show how the interventionist approach to causation, especially within a structural equations framework, provides a simple and elegant account of the causal structure (...)
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  • The effect of oral vocabulary on reading visually novel words: a comparison of the dual-route-cascaded and triangle frameworks.Meredith McKague, Chris Pratt & Michael B. Johnston - 2001 - Cognition 80 (3):231-262.
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  • Emergence in Cognitive Science.James L. McClelland - 2010 - Topics in Cognitive Science 2 (4):751-770.
    The study of human intelligence was once dominated by symbolic approaches, but over the last 30 years an alternative approach has arisen. Symbols and processes that operate on them are often seen today as approximate characterizations of the emergent consequences of sub- or nonsymbolic processes, and a wide range of constructs in cognitive science can be understood as emergents. These include representational constructs (units, structures, rules), architectural constructs (central executive, declarative memory), and developmental processes and outcomes (stages, sensitive periods, neurocognitive (...)
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  • Spelling Acquisition in English and Italian: A Cross-Linguistic Study.Chiara V. Marinelli, Cristina Romani, Cristina Burani & Pierluigi Zoccolotti - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • English Word and Pseudoword Spellings and Phonological Awareness: Detailed Comparisons From Three L1 Writing Systems.Katherine I. Martin, Emily Lawson, Kathryn Carpenter & Elisa Hummer - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Spelling is a fundamental literacy skill facilitating word recognition and thus higher-level reading abilities via its support for efficient text processing (Adams, 1990; Joshi et al., 2008; Perfetti and Stafura, 2014). However, relatively little work examines second language (L2) spelling in adults, and even less work examines learners from different first language (L1) writing systems. This is despite the fact that the influence of L1 writing system on L2 literacy skills is well documented (Hudson, 2007; Koda and Zehler, 2008; Grabe, (...)
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  • Does the mean adequately represent reading performance? Evidence from a cross-linguistic study.Chiara V. Marinelli, Joanna K. Horne, Sarah P. McGeown, Pierluigi Zoccolotti & Marialuisa Martelli - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  • Recognition intent and visual word recognition☆.Man-Ying Wang & Chi-Le Ching - 2009 - Consciousness and Cognition 18 (1):65-77.
    This study adopted a change detection task to investigate whether and how recognition intent affects the construction of orthographic representation in visual word recognition. Chinese readers and nonreaders detected color changes in radical components of Chinese characters. Explicit recognition demand was imposed in Experiment 2 by an additional recognition task. When the recognition was implicit, a bias favoring the radical location informative of character identity was found in Chinese readers , but not nonreaders . With explicit recognition demands, the effect (...)
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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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  • Spanish L2 Chinese Learners’ Awareness of Morpho-Syntactic Structures in the Reading Comprehension of Splittable Compounds.Ziming Lu, Ying Dai & Yicheng Wu - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Reading comprehension is never considered a simple task in linguists’ views as it requires a full set of linguistic knowledge, such as word decoding, understanding syntactic and morphological structures, and deriving proper meanings from these structures in a given context. Bearing the simple view of reading, the primary goal of this study is to explore whether the split presentation of Chinese splittable compounds influences the recognition of the compounds in second language Chinese reading comprehension, and how the reading skills, i.e., (...)
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  • Dissociations between developmental dyslexias and attention deficits.Limor Lukov, Naama Friedmann, Lilach Shalev, Lilach Khentov-Kraus, Nir Shalev, Rakefet Lorber & Revital Guggenheim - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  • Long-term repetition priming and semantic interference in a lexical-semantic matching task: tapping the links between object names and colors.Toby J. Lloyd-Jones & Kazuyo Nakabayashi - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  • The Influence of Orthographic Neighborhood Density and Word Frequency on Visual Word Recognition: Insights from RT Distributional Analyses.Stephen Wee Hun Lim - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • Lexical Orthographic Knowledge Mediates the Relationship Between Character Reading and Reading Comprehension Among Learners With Chinese as a Second Language.Xian Liao, Elizabeth Ka Yee Loh & Mingjia Cai - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Reading in Chinese is complex because readers should not only recognize characters by basic units but also integrate characters into words when reading text. While many efforts have been devoted to investigating the effect of sub-lexical orthographic knowledge in Chinese character reading, less is known about the role played by lexical orthographic knowledge at word level. A total of 424 secondary learners with Chinese as a second language in Hong Kong were assessed with character reading, reading comprehension, and two lexical (...)
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  • Positive Psychology Broadens Readers’ Attentional Scope During L2 Reading: Evidence From Eye Movements.Chi Yui Leung, Hitoshi Mikami & Lisa Yoshikawa - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:472204.
    While positive psychology has drawn increasing interests among researchers in the SLA literature recently, little is known with respect to the relationship between positive psychology and mental processes during L2 reading. To bridge the gap, the present study investigated whether and how positive psychology (self-efficacy) influences word reading strategies during L2 sentence reading. Based on previous studies, eye-movement patterns with first-fixation locations closer to the beginning of a word can be characterized as an attempt to process the word with a (...)
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  • Altered Inhibitory Mechanisms in Parkinson’s Disease: Evidence From Lexical Decision and Simple Reaction Time Tasks.Alban Letanneux, Jean-Luc Velay, François Viallet & Serge Pinto - 2021 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
    IntroductionAlthough the motor signs of Parkinson’s disease are well defined, nonmotor symptoms, including higher-level language deficits, have also been shown to be frequent in patients with PD. In the present study, we used a lexical decision task to find out whether access to the mental lexicon is impaired in patients with PD, and whether task performance is affected by bradykinesia.Materials and MethodsParticipants were 34 nondemented patients with PD, either without medication or under optimum medication. A total of 19 age-matched control (...)
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  • Orthographic consistency and parafoveal preview benefit: A resource-sharing account of language differences in processing of phonological and semantic codes.Jochen Laubrock & Sven Hohenstein - 2012 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 35 (5):292-293.
    Parafoveal preview benefit is an implicit measure of lexical activation in reading. PB has been demonstrated for orthographic and phonological but not for semantically related information in English. In contrast, semantic PB is obtained in German and Chinese. We propose that these language differences reveal differential resource demands and timing of phonological and semantic decoding in different orthographic systems.
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  • Frequency Effects on Spelling Error Recognition: An ERP Study.Ekaterina V. Larionova & Olga V. Martynova - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Spelling errors are ubiquitous in all writing systems. Most studies exploring spelling errors focused on the phonological plausibility of errors. However, unlike typical pseudohomophones, spelling errors occur in naturally produced written language. We investigated the time course of recognition of the most frequent orthographic errors in Russian and the effect of word frequency on this process. During event-related potentials recording, 26 native Russian speakers silently read high-frequency correctly spelled words, low-frequency correctly spelled words, high-frequency words with errors, and low-frequency words (...)
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  • Visual word learning in adults with dyslexia.Rosa K. W. Kwok & Andrew W. Ellis - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
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  • Inhibition accumulates over time at multiple processing levels in bilingual language control.Daniel Kleinman & Tamar H. Gollan - 2018 - Cognition 173 (C):115-132.
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  • Amodal processing of visual speech as revealed by priming.Jeesun Kim, Chris Davis & Phill Krins - 2004 - Cognition 93 (1):B39-B47.
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  • Dissociations in Performance on Novel Versus Irregular Items: Single‐Route Demonstrations With Input Gain in Localist and Distributed Models.Christopher T. Kello, Daragh E. Sibley & David C. Plaut - 2005 - Cognitive Science 29 (4):627-654.
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  • The segment as the minimal planning unit in speech production and reading aloud: evidence and implications.Alan H. Kawamoto, Qiang Liu & Christopher T. Kello - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • The Influence of Orthographic Units Across Korean Children of Different Ages in Hangul Reading.Yeongsil Ju, Ami Sambai & Akira Uno - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Using the dual-route reading model as a framework, this study investigated the following research questions on Hangul reading: Which orthographic units influence the reading performance of Korean-speaking children? In addition, do the influential units change as the children grow up? To answer these questions, we tested the effects of age, frequency, lexicality, and two types of length—the numbers of letters and syllable blocks —and the interactions of these factors in the reading performance of Korean-speaking preschool and primary school children from (...)
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  • Using Theory-Based Test Construction to Develop a New Curriculum-Based Measurement for Sentence Reading Comprehension.Jana Jungjohann, Jeffrey M. DeVries, Andreas Mühling & Markus Gebhardt - 2018 - Frontiers in Education 2018.
    Reading comprehension at sentence level is a core component in the students’ comprehension development, but there is a lack of comprehension assessments at the sentence level, which respect the theory of reading comprehension. In this article, a new web-based sentence-comprehension assessment for German primary school students is developed and evaluated using a curriculum-based measurement (CBM) framework. The test focuses on sentence level reading comprehension as an intermediary between word and text comprehension. The construction builds upon the theory of reading comprehension (...)
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  • The Role of the Left Anterior Temporal Lobe for Unpredictable and Complex Mappings in Word Reading.Marilyne Joyal, Simona M. Brambati, Robert J. Laforce, Maxime Montembeault, Mariem Boukadi, Isabelle Rouleau, Joël Macoir, Sven Joubert, Shirley Fecteau & Maximiliano A. Wilson - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  • Is the ‘naming’ deficit in dyslexia a misnomer?Manon W. Jones, Holly P. Branigan, Anna Hatzidaki & Mateo Obregón - 2010 - Cognition 116 (1):56-70.
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  • On the role of set when reading aloud: A dissociation between prelexical and lexical processing.Jeffrey R. Paulitzki, Evan F. Risko, Shannon O’Malley, Jennifer A. Stolz & Derek Besner - 2009 - Consciousness and Cognition 18 (1):135-144.
    Two experiments investigated the role that mental set plays in reading aloud using the task choice procedure developed by Besner and Care [Besner, D., & Care, S. . A paradigm for exploring what the mind does while deciding what it should do. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 57, 311–320]. Subjects were presented with a word, and asked to either read it aloud or decide whether it appeared in upper/lower case. Task information, in the form of a brief auditory cue, appeared (...)
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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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  • Do current connectionist learning models account for reading development in different languages?Florian Hutzler, Johannes C. Ziegler, Conrad Perry, Heinz Wimmer & Marco Zorzi - 2004 - Cognition 91 (3):273-296.
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  • Alphabetic and nonalphabetic L1 effects in English word identification: a comparison of Korean and Chinese English L2 learners. [REVIEW]Sarah Hulme, Peter Mitchell, David Wood, Michele Miozzo, Min Wang, Keiko Koda, Charles A. Perfetti, James R. Brockmole, Ranxiao Frances Wang & Jeffrey Lidz - 2003 - Cognition 87 (2):129-149.
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  • Visual Similarity of Words Alone Can Modulate Hemispheric Lateralization in Visual Word Recognition: Evidence From Modeling Chinese Character Recognition.Janet H. Hsiao & Kit Cheung - 2016 - Cognitive Science 40 (2):351-372.
    In Chinese orthography, the most common character structure consists of a semantic radical on the left and a phonetic radical on the right ; the minority, opposite arrangement also exists. Recent studies showed that SP character processing is more left hemisphere lateralized than PS character processing. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether this is due to phonetic radical position or character type frequency. Through computational modeling with artificial lexicons, in which we implement a theory of hemispheric asymmetry in perception but do (...)
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  • Simple Co‐Occurrence Statistics Reproducibly Predict Association Ratings.Markus J. Hofmann, Chris Biemann, Chris Westbury, Mariam Murusidze, Markus Conrad & Arthur M. Jacobs - 2018 - Cognitive Science 42 (7):2287-2312.
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