On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation account

A number of models of visual-word recognition assume that the repetition of an item in a lexical decision experiment increases that item’s familiarity/wordness. This would produce not only a facilitative repetition effect for words, but also an inhibitory effect for nonwords (i.e., more familiarity/...

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Main Authors: Manuel ePerea, Ana eMarcet, Marta eVergara-Martínez, Pablo eGomez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00215/full
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spelling doaj-4791390237af4095b2af0e859149cc332020-11-24T23:00:36ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-02-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.00215169844On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation accountManuel ePerea0Manuel ePerea1Ana eMarcet2Marta eVergara-Martínez3Pablo eGomez4Universidad de ValenciaBCBL, Basque Center on Cognition, Brain, and LanguageUniversidad de ValenciaUniversidad de ValenciaDePaul UniversityA number of models of visual-word recognition assume that the repetition of an item in a lexical decision experiment increases that item’s familiarity/wordness. This would produce not only a facilitative repetition effect for words, but also an inhibitory effect for nonwords (i.e., more familiarity/wordness makes the negative decision slower). We conducted a two-block lexical decision experiment to examine word/nonword repetition effects in the framework of a leading familiarity/wordness model of the lexical decision task, namely, the diffusion model (Ratcliff et al., 2004). Results showed that while repeated words were responded to faster than the unrepeated words, repeated nonwords were responded to more slowly than the nonrepeated nonwords. Fits from the diffusion model revealed that the repetition effect for words/nonwords was mainly due to differences in the familiarity/wordness (drift rate) parameter. This word/nonword dissociation favors those accounts that posit that the previous presentation of an item increases its degree of familiarity/wordness.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00215/fullWord Processingdiffusion modellexical decisionrepetitionRT distributions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manuel ePerea
Manuel ePerea
Ana eMarcet
Marta eVergara-Martínez
Pablo eGomez
spellingShingle Manuel ePerea
Manuel ePerea
Ana eMarcet
Marta eVergara-Martínez
Pablo eGomez
On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation account
Frontiers in Psychology
Word Processing
diffusion model
lexical decision
repetition
RT distributions
author_facet Manuel ePerea
Manuel ePerea
Ana eMarcet
Marta eVergara-Martínez
Pablo eGomez
author_sort Manuel ePerea
title On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation account
title_short On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation account
title_full On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation account
title_fullStr On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation account
title_full_unstemmed On the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: An evidence accumulation account
title_sort on the dissociation of word/nonword repetition effects in lexical decision: an evidence accumulation account
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-02-01
description A number of models of visual-word recognition assume that the repetition of an item in a lexical decision experiment increases that item’s familiarity/wordness. This would produce not only a facilitative repetition effect for words, but also an inhibitory effect for nonwords (i.e., more familiarity/wordness makes the negative decision slower). We conducted a two-block lexical decision experiment to examine word/nonword repetition effects in the framework of a leading familiarity/wordness model of the lexical decision task, namely, the diffusion model (Ratcliff et al., 2004). Results showed that while repeated words were responded to faster than the unrepeated words, repeated nonwords were responded to more slowly than the nonrepeated nonwords. Fits from the diffusion model revealed that the repetition effect for words/nonwords was mainly due to differences in the familiarity/wordness (drift rate) parameter. This word/nonword dissociation favors those accounts that posit that the previous presentation of an item increases its degree of familiarity/wordness.
topic Word Processing
diffusion model
lexical decision
repetition
RT distributions
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00215/full
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