PMID: 16532853Mar 15, 2006Paper

Cleaving automatic processes from strategic biases in phonological priming

Memory & Cognition
James M McQueen, Joan Sereno

Abstract

In a phonological priming experiment using spoken Dutch words, Dutch listeners were taught varying expectancies and relatedness relations about the phonological form of target words, given particular primes. They learned to expect that, after a particular prime, if the target was a word, it would be from a specific phonological category. The expectancy either involved phonological overlap (e.g., honk-vonk, "base-spark"; expected related) or did not (e.g., nest-galm, "nest-boom"; expected unrelated, where the learned expectation after hearing nest was a word rhyming in -alm). Targets were occasionally inconsistent with expectations. In these inconsistent expectancy trials, targets were either unrelated (e.g., honk-mest, "base-manure"; unexpected unrelated), where the listener was expecting a related target, or related (e.g., nest-pest, "nest-plague"; unexpected related), where the listener was expecting an unrelated target. Participant expectations and phonological relatedness were thus manipulated factorially for three types of phonological overlap (rhyme, one onset phoneme, and three onset phonemes) at three interstimulus intervals (ISIs; 50, 500, and 2,000 msec). Lexical decisions to targets revealed evidence of expectancy-ba...Continue Reading

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Citations

Nov 20, 2012·Journal of Communication Disorders·Elisabet ClassonJerker Rönnberg
Feb 18, 2010·Journal of Neurolinguistics·Timothy JustusDiane Swick
Jul 13, 2014·Journal of Psycholinguistic Research·Michael C W Yip
Sep 24, 2014·The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology : QJEP·Jennifer S BurtJulian R Matthews
Mar 12, 2008·Language and Speech·Chotiga PattamadilokJosé Morais
Dec 19, 2015·Language and Speech·Joan A Sereno, Hyunjung Lee
Jan 1, 2017·Language, Cognition and Neuroscience·Sophie DufourJonathan Grainger

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