Do Diacritics Entail an Early Processing Cost in the Absence of Abstract Representations? Evidence from Masked Priming in English

被引:7
作者
Perea, Manuel [1 ,2 ]
Gomez, Pablo [3 ,4 ]
Baciero, Ana [2 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain
[2] Univ Antonio Nebrija, Madrid, Spain
[3] Calif State Univ, Palm Desert Campus, San Bernardino, CA USA
[4] Palm Desert Campus, Palm Desert, CA USA
[5] Depaul Univ, Chicago, IL 60604 USA
[6] Bournemouth Univ, Bournemouth, Dorset, England
关键词
Lexical access; masked priming; orthographic processing; visual similarity; REPETITION; PERCEPTION; MODEL;
D O I
10.1177/00238309221078321
中图分类号
R36 [病理学]; R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100104 ; 100213 ;
摘要
Using the masked priming technique, word recognition experiments in various languages have shown slower response times for a target word like NEVEU (nephew, in French) when preceded by a diacritical prime like neveu than by the identity prime neveu. The most common account of this effect is linguistic: diacritical and non-diacritical vowels (e.g., e and e) activate different letter representations (e.g., compare neveu /n(sic).vo/ vs. neveu /ne.vo/). However, another explanation is that the reduced effectiveness of the diacritical primes is merely due to the perceptual salience of accent marks in the first moments of word processing. Here, we designed a masked priming experiment that tested this perceptual salience account by comparing the effectiveness of diacritical versus non-diacritical primes in a language where diacritics have no linguistic value, namely, English (e.g., north-NORTH vs. north-NORTH). We found a small but reliable cost due to the diacritical primes, thus revealing that perceptual salience reduced the effectiveness of the primes. However, the effect sizes were substantially smaller than in the experiments in languages with diacritical marks, thus suggesting that the neveu-NEVEU versus neveu-NEVEU difference relies on both linguistic and perceptual sources.
引用
收藏
页码:105 / 117
页数:13
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