Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/21376

Title: The Word Composite Effect Depends on Abstract Lexical Representations But Not Surface Features Like Case and Font.
Authors: Ventura, Paulo
Fernandes, Tânia
Leite, Isabel
Wong, Alan C.-N.
Editors: Tripathy, Srimant Prasad
Keywords: perceptual expertise
visual word recognition
holistic effect
composite task
alternating-case
handwritten forms
Issue Date: Jun-2017
Publisher: Frontiers in Psychology
Citation: Ventura P, Fernandes T, Leite I, Almeida VB, Casqueiro I and Wong AC-N (2017) The Word Composite Effect Depends on Abstract Lexical Representations But Not Surface Features Like Case and Font. Front. Psychol. 8:1036.
Abstract: Prior studies have shown that words show a composite effect: When readers perform a same-different matching task on a target-part of a word, performance is affected by the irrelevant part, whose influence is severely reduced when the two parts are misaligned. However, the locus of this word composite effect is largely unknown. To enlighten it, in two experiments, Portuguese readers performed the composite task on letter strings: in Experiment 1, in written words varying in surface features (between-participants: courier, notera, alternating-cAsE), and in Experiment 2 in pseudowords. The word composite effect, signaled by a significant interaction between alignment of the two word parts and congruence between parts was found in the three conditions of Experiment 1, being unaffected by NoVeLtY of the configuration or by handwritten form. This effect seems to have a lexical locus, given that in Experiment 2 only the main effect of congruence between parts was significant and was not modulated by alignment. Indeed, the cross-experiment analysis showed that words presented stronger congruence effects than pseudowords only in the aligned condition, because when misaligned the whole lexical item configuration was disrupted. Therefore, the word composite effect strongly depends on abstract lexical representations, as it is unaffected by surface features and is specific to lexical items.
URI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01036
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/21376
Type: article
Appears in Collections:PSI - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica

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