| Literature DB >> 12081382 |
Chris Westbury1, Lori Buchanan.
Abstract
The frequency effect, by which high frequency words are recognized with more ease than low frequency words, is one of the most robust effects in cognitive psychology. Frequency interacts with many word-level variables, to the extent that most effects reported in word recognition literature have an impact only on low frequency words. This has been taken as evidence that high frequency words are accessed in a special way, via either an addressed pathway as in the dual-route model or an assembled pathway as in a PDP model. Under either model, sublexical effects should have no bearing on the ease with which representations for high frequency words are accessed. In this article, however, we describe a series of studies that examine a sublexical effect (namely nonlength controlled minimal bigram frequency) that is only found for high frequency words, suggesting that sublexical processing must play a role in the recognition of even high frequency words.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12081382 DOI: 10.1006/brln.2001.2507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Lang ISSN: 0093-934X Impact factor: 2.381