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Phonetic–semantic
mediated false recognition: Does activation fail to spread?
WILLIAM P.
WALLACE, JOANNA SALAPSKA-GELLERI, CHRISTINE L. BELZ, and MELANIE A. OWEN
University of Nevada
Spoken word recognition involves
brief activation of candidate words. Six experiments examined whether
words semantically related to phonologically activated words would be
falsely recognized. Experiments 1 and 2 involved homophones as test words;
Experiment 3 used strong associates for the semantic mediation link. Experiment
4 approximated lists of "strong" converging associates. Experiment 5 expanded
the real time needed for word identification by using a gating procedure
during study. In Experiment 6, the goal was to create a more sensitive
test by requiring participants to indicate which of two lures (mediated
or control) was "most likely" to be new. Recognition errors were sensitive
to separate phonetic and semantic stages in the mediated chain; however,
there was little evidence of mediated false recognition, despite expectations
derived from common models of spreading activation.
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