4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Does jugde activate COURT?: Transposed-letter similarity effects in masked associative priming

Journal

MEMORY & COGNITION
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 829-841

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/BF03196438

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Transposed-letter (TL) nonwords (e.g., jugde) can be easily misperceived as words, a fact that is somewhat inconsistent with the letter-position-coding schemes employed by most current models of visual word recognition. To examine this. issue further, we conducted four masked semantic/associative priming experiments, using a lexical decision task. In Experiment 1, the related primes could be words, TL-internal nonwords, or replacement-letter (RL) nonwords (e.g., judge, jugde, or judpe, respectively; the target would be court).,: Relative to an unrelated condition, masked TL-internal primes produced a significant semantic/associative priming effect, an effect. that was only slightly smaller than the priming effect for word primes. No effect, however, was observed for RL-nonword primes. In Experiment 2, the TL-nonword primes were created by switching the two final letters of the,primes (e.g., judeg). The results again showed a semantic/associative priming effect for word primes, but not for TL-final non-word primes or for RL-nonword primes. Experiment 3 replicated the associative/semantic priming effect for TL-internal nonword primes, with, again, no effect for TL-final nonword primes: Finally, Experiment 4 again failed to yield a priming effect for TL-final nonword prunes. The implications of these results for the choice of a letter-position-coding scheme in visual word recognition-models are discussed.

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