Abstract
Previous investigators have argued that printed words are recognized directly from visual representations and/or phonological representations obtained through phonemic recoding. The present research tested these hypotheses by manipulating graphemic and phonemic relations within various pairs of letter strings. Ss in two experiments classified the pairs as words or nonwords. Reaction times and error rates were relatively small for word pairs (e.g., BRIBE-TRIBE) that were both graphemically, and phonemically similar. Graphemic similarity alone inhibited performance on other word pairs (e.g., COUCH-TOUCH). These and other results suggest that phonological representations play a significant role in visual word recognition and that there is a dependence between successive phonemic-encoding operations. An encoding-bias model is proposed to explain the data.
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Meyer, D.E., Schvaneveldt, R.W. & Ruddy, M.G. Functions of graphemic and phonemic codes in visual word-recognition. Memory & Cognition 2, 309–321 (1974). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209002
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209002