» Articles » PMID: 24456311

Time Course Analyses of Orthographic and Phonological Priming Effects During Word Recognition in a Transparent Orthography

Overview
Specialties Psychiatry
Psychology
Date 2014 Jan 25
PMID 24456311
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In opaque orthographies, the activation of orthographic and phonological codes follows distinct time courses during visual word recognition. However, it is unclear how orthography and phonology are accessed in more transparent orthographies. Therefore, we conducted time course analyses of masked priming effects in the transparent Dutch orthography. The first study used targets with small phonological differences between phonological and orthographic primes, which are typical in transparent orthographies. Results showed consistent orthographic priming effects, yet phonological priming effects were absent. The second study explicitly manipulated the strength of the phonological difference and revealed that both orthographic and phonological priming effects became identifiable when phonological differences were strong enough. This suggests that, similar to opaque orthographies, strong phonological differences are a prerequisite to separate orthographic and phonological priming effects in transparent orthographies. Orthographic and phonological priming appeared to follow distinct time courses, with orthographic codes being quickly translated into phonological codes and phonology dominating the remainder of the lexical access phase.

Citing Articles

Sub-Lexical Processing of Chinese-English Bilinguals: An ERP Analysis.

Chen Y, Rossi E Brain Sci. 2024; 14(9).

PMID: 39335418 PMC: 11430797. DOI: 10.3390/brainsci14090923.


Masked priming by misspellings: Word frequency moderates the effects of SOA and prime-target similarity.

Burt J Mem Cognit. 2015; 44(2):262-77.

PMID: 26530310 DOI: 10.3758/s13421-015-0551-1.