{"title":"走在狂野的一边:假同音字加工的语境依赖性。","authors":"Vasilena Stefanova, Christoph Scheepers","doi":"10.1037/xhp0001371","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The pseudohomophone (PH) effect refers to an established finding whereby in a visual lexical decision task, nonword letter strings that are pronounced like real words (e.g., WAWK) are harder to reject than nonword strings that are not pronounced like real words (e.g., FLIS). This article reports three lexical decision experiments that aimed at further exploring the underlying processing mechanisms. In Experiments 1 and 2, we compared PHs like WAWK with unpronounceable nonwords like NRUG and pronounceable nonwords like FLIS, making sure that all stimuli (including real-word fillers) were carefully matched in length, bigram frequency, and number of orthographic neighbors. Matching stimuli in this way resulted in the real-word fillers to be of low lexical frequency (lower than for the PHs' base words). Experiment 1 employed a standard lexical decision task, whereas Experiment 2 used the two-alternative forced choice eye-tracking paradigm originally developed in Kunert and Scheepers (2014). Both experiments converged on showing a reversal of the classical PH effect: while unpronounceable strings like NRUG were correctly rejected relatively quickly, PHs like WAWK were indeed easier to reject than pronounceable nonwords like FLIS. Our final Experiment 3, by contrast, confirmed a \"classical\" PH effect when the same nonword stimuli were tested against high- rather than low-frequency words as fillers. We conclude that the direction of the PH effect strongly depends on the overall material context. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":50195,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Experimental Psychology-Human Perception and Performance","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Wawk on the wild side: Context-dependence of pseudohomophone processing.\",\"authors\":\"Vasilena Stefanova, Christoph Scheepers\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/xhp0001371\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The pseudohomophone (PH) effect refers to an established finding whereby in a visual lexical decision task, nonword letter strings that are pronounced like real words (e.g., WAWK) are harder to reject than nonword strings that are not pronounced like real words (e.g., FLIS). This article reports three lexical decision experiments that aimed at further exploring the underlying processing mechanisms. In Experiments 1 and 2, we compared PHs like WAWK with unpronounceable nonwords like NRUG and pronounceable nonwords like FLIS, making sure that all stimuli (including real-word fillers) were carefully matched in length, bigram frequency, and number of orthographic neighbors. Matching stimuli in this way resulted in the real-word fillers to be of low lexical frequency (lower than for the PHs' base words). Experiment 1 employed a standard lexical decision task, whereas Experiment 2 used the two-alternative forced choice eye-tracking paradigm originally developed in Kunert and Scheepers (2014). Both experiments converged on showing a reversal of the classical PH effect: while unpronounceable strings like NRUG were correctly rejected relatively quickly, PHs like WAWK were indeed easier to reject than pronounceable nonwords like FLIS. Our final Experiment 3, by contrast, confirmed a \\\"classical\\\" PH effect when the same nonword stimuli were tested against high- rather than low-frequency words as fillers. We conclude that the direction of the PH effect strongly depends on the overall material context. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
假同音字(PH)效应指的是一个已建立的发现,即在视觉词汇决策任务中,发音像真实单词的非单词字母字符串(例如,WAWK)比发音不像真实单词的非单词字符串(例如,FLIS)更难被拒绝。本文报告了三个词法决策实验,旨在进一步探索潜在的处理机制。在实验1和2中,我们将WAWK这样的小单词与不可发音的非单词(如NRUG)和可发音的非单词(如FLIS)进行了比较,确保所有刺激(包括真实单词填充)在长度、双字母频率和正字法邻居的数量上都经过仔细匹配。以这种方式匹配刺激导致真实单词填充词的词汇频率较低(低于小灵通的基本单词)。实验1采用标准的词汇决策任务,而实验2采用Kunert和Scheepers(2014)最初开发的双选项强迫选择眼动追踪范式。这两个实验都显示了经典PH效应的逆转:虽然像NRUG这样不可发音的字符串被正确地较快地拒绝了,但像WAWK这样的PH值确实比像FLIS这样可发音的非单词更容易被拒绝。相比之下,我们最后的实验3证实了一个“经典的”PH效应,当同样的非单词刺激以高频词而不是低频词作为填充物进行测试时。我们得出结论,PH效应的方向在很大程度上取决于整个物质环境。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Wawk on the wild side: Context-dependence of pseudohomophone processing.
The pseudohomophone (PH) effect refers to an established finding whereby in a visual lexical decision task, nonword letter strings that are pronounced like real words (e.g., WAWK) are harder to reject than nonword strings that are not pronounced like real words (e.g., FLIS). This article reports three lexical decision experiments that aimed at further exploring the underlying processing mechanisms. In Experiments 1 and 2, we compared PHs like WAWK with unpronounceable nonwords like NRUG and pronounceable nonwords like FLIS, making sure that all stimuli (including real-word fillers) were carefully matched in length, bigram frequency, and number of orthographic neighbors. Matching stimuli in this way resulted in the real-word fillers to be of low lexical frequency (lower than for the PHs' base words). Experiment 1 employed a standard lexical decision task, whereas Experiment 2 used the two-alternative forced choice eye-tracking paradigm originally developed in Kunert and Scheepers (2014). Both experiments converged on showing a reversal of the classical PH effect: while unpronounceable strings like NRUG were correctly rejected relatively quickly, PHs like WAWK were indeed easier to reject than pronounceable nonwords like FLIS. Our final Experiment 3, by contrast, confirmed a "classical" PH effect when the same nonword stimuli were tested against high- rather than low-frequency words as fillers. We conclude that the direction of the PH effect strongly depends on the overall material context. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance publishes studies on perception, control of action, perceptual aspects of language processing, and related cognitive processes.