Lexical and Sublexical Tranlation of Spelling to Sound
Lexical and Sublexical Translation of Spelling to Sound: Strategic Anticipation of Lexical Status
Author(s)
Stephen Monsell, Karalyn E. Patterson, Andrew Graham, Claire H. Hughes and
Robert Milroy
Journal Reference:(s)
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 1992.
Vol. 18. No. 3, 452-467
Abstract:(s)
Two experiments on oral reading of single words compared naming performance
in pure blocks of nonwords or exception words with performance in blocks of
randomly mixed nonwords and exception words. Ss named exception words faster and
made fewer regularization errors when they were not also prepared for nonwords.
These data suggest Ss inhibit or ignore the computation of assembled phonology
when only exception words are expected. Ss named nonwords faster, but no more
accurately, when low-frequency exception words were not also anticipated. Thus,
Ss' readiness to execute assembled phonology appears to be adjusted in relation
to the likely time course of retrieval of learned pronunciations, when the
latter must be attended to. This evidence for strategic dissociation between
sublexical and lexical translation is discussed in relation to current
models.
# of Citations - 125
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