Orthographic influences in spoken word recognition: The consistency effect in semantic and gender categorization tasks.
Automatic activation of orthography in spoken word recognition: Pseudohomograph priming. Orthographic activation in spoken word recognition 4beginning of /ləgu: n/, i. Ziegler and Ferrand (1. Pattamadilok, Morais, Ventura, and Kolinsky (2. French words (like grès) whose pronunciation could potentially be given a different spelling (i. Ventura, Morais, Pattamadilok, and Kolinsky (2. Portuguese. Using a priming paradigm, Jakimik, Cole, and Rudnicky (1.
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Slowiaczek, Soltano, Wieting, and Bishop (2. Chéreau, Gaskell, and Dumay (2. Other studies by Castles, Holmes, Neath, and Kinoshita (2.
Dijkstra, Roelofs, and Fieuws (1. Hallé, Chéreau, and Segui (2. Ventura, Kolinsky, Brito- Mendes, and Morais (2. Treiman and Cassar (1. Ziegler and Muneaux (2. Ziegler, Muneaux, and Grainger (2.
With it being consistently shown that orthographic information has an impact on spoken word processing, the critical question now becomes whether this orthographic impact merely arises strategically in order to help make decisions about a spoken target word, or whether it is sufficiently automatic that it occurs in the normal course of processing a verbal utterance. If the latter is true, theories of speech recognition would be deficient if they were to ignore the role of orthography. Most of the tasks previously employed could be subject to strategic effects. For example, the explicit analysis of rhyming (e. Seidenberg & Tanenhaus, 1.
Taft & Hambly, 1. Ventura et al., 2.