Artigo Revisado por pares

Effects of frequency on visual word recognition tasks: Where are they?

1989; American Psychological Association; Volume: 118; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1037//0096-3445.118.1.43

ISSN

1939-2222

Autores

Stephen Monsell, Michael C. Doyle, Patrick Haggard,

Tópico(s)

Text Readability and Simplification

Resumo

Compared the effect of frequency on lexical decision time (LDT) with that on reaction time (RT) in four other tasks, for the same words and subjects. Exp. 1 yielded an effect on semantic categorization RT (person vs. thing) similar in size and form to the effect on LDT. Exp. 2 yielded a substantial effect for syntactic categorization (noun vs. adjective), although weaker than the effect on LDT. In Exp. 3, the effect on naming RT for stress-final disyllabic words was identical to that on LDT, whereas the effect for stress-initial words was weaker. Exp. 4 showed no effect of frequency on delayed naming RT. The data undermine recent arguments for a (mainly) postidentification task-specific locus of frequency effects but are compatible with the older assumption (also characteristic of new PDP learning models) that lexical identification is a major locus of frequency effects (perhaps together with retrieval of meaning or phonology). But effects at that locus may be masked or diluted by other processes.

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