Diagnostics of phonological lexical processing: Pseudohomophone naming advantages, disadvantages, and base-word frequency effects

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Abstract

Phonological lexical access has been investigated, by examining both a pseudohomophone (e.g., brane) base-word frequency effect and a pseudohomophone advantage overpronounceable nonwords (e.g., frane) in a single mixed block of naming trials. With a new set of pseudohomophones and nonwords presented in a mixed block, we replicated the standard finding in the naming literature: no reliable base-word frequency effect, and a pseudohomophone advantage. However, for this and two of three other sets of stimuli - those of McCann and Besner (1987), Seidenberg, Petersen, MacDonald, and Plaut (1996), and Herdman, LeFevre, and Greenham (1996), respectively - reliable effects of base-word frequency on pseudohomophone naming latency were found when pseudohomophones were presented in pure blocks prior to nonwords. Three of the four stimulus sets tested produced a pseudohomophone naming disadvantage when pseudohomophones were presented prior to nonwords. When nonwords were presented first, these effects were diminished. A strategy-based scaling account of the data is argued to provide a better explanation of the data than is the criterion-homogenization theory (Lupker, Brown, & Colombo, 1997).

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Borowsky, R., Owen, W. J., & Masson, M. E. J. (2002). Diagnostics of phonological lexical processing: Pseudohomophone naming advantages, disadvantages, and base-word frequency effects. Memory and Cognition, 30(6), 969–987. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03195781

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