Effects of association, frequency, and stimulus quality on naming words in the presence or absence of pseudowords

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Abstract

According to classical dual-route theory, effects of associative priming and frequency on the naming of printed words arise from lexical access and should be weak or absent when word names are assembled prelexically. Assembled naming would be more likely in a shallow orthography, especially in the presence of nonwords. This hypothesis was examined with the shallow Serbo-Croatian orthography. Interactions between association, frequency, and stimulus quality were also examined in both Serbo-Croatian and English. Contrary to classical dual-route theory, both lexical effects were found for naming words in Serbo-Croatian, with or without nonwords. Neither interaction was significant in Serbo-Croatian and only association X quality was significant in English. Discussion focused on (a) the claim that lexical effects on naming in a shallow orthography constitute prima facie evidence against either prelexical phonology or the orthographic depth hypothesis, and (b) the possible factorization of frequency and active associative knowledge in naming words. © 1995 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Carello, C., Lukatela, G., Peter, M., & Turvey, M. T. (1995). Effects of association, frequency, and stimulus quality on naming words in the presence or absence of pseudowords. Memory & Cognition, 23(3), 289–300. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197231

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