The role of phonology in visual word recognition and reading Marc Brysbaert.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Accessing spoken words: the importance of word onsets
Advertisements

> Main questions of the study: (1)Are there global differences in reading speed and accuracy between dyslexics and controls across.
Perception and Dyslexia Mr Patrick Mulcahy, Chair ASASA
Knowing More than One Language: The Psycholinguistics of Bilingualism Marina Blekher Department of Linguistics.
PSY 369: Psycholinguistics Language Production: Models cont.
Evaluating the Effect of Neighborhood Size on Chinese Word Naming and Lexical Decision Meng-Feng Li 1, Jei-Tun WU 1*, Wei-Chun Lin 1 and Fu-Ling Yang 1.
Is your child a poor reader? Maybe he or she just needs a memory upgrade Martin Beaudoin, Ph.D. University of Alberta Suzanne Sauvé, MSc-SLP, R. SLP(C)
Language and Cognition Colombo, June 2011 Day 8 Aphasia: disorders of comprehension.
The Orthographic Depth Hypothesis: 25 Years Later M. T. Turvey University of Connecticut and Haskins Laboratories.
Introduction Complex words may be either (a) stored as full forms in the mental lexicon, or (b) undergo decomposition into their constituent morphemes.
Cognitive Psychology, 2 nd Ed. Chapter 11 Language Production.
Experiment 2: MEG Study Materials and Methods: 11 right-handed subjects with 20:20 vision were run. 3 subjects’ data was discarded because of poor performance.
Phonetic Similarity Effects in Masked Priming Marja-Liisa Mailend 1, Edwin Maas 1, & Kenneth I. Forster 2 1 Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing.
How General is Lexically-Driven Perceptual Learning of Phonetic Identity? Tanya Kraljic and Arthur G. Samuel Our Questions (e.g., learning a particular.
Models of Language Language and Cognition Colombo 2011.
PS: Introduction to Psycholinguistics Winter Term 2005/06 Instructor: Daniel Wiechmann Office hours: Mon 2-3 pm Phone:
The processing of morpheme-like units in monomorphemic words.
Marc Brysbaert Ghent University Bilingualism is everywhere There are at least 3000 languages for 195 independent countries. Bilingualism is especially.
Psycholinguistic methodology Psycholinguistics: Questions and methods.
Bootstrapping a Language- Independent Synthesizer Craig Olinsky Media Lab Europe / University College Dublin 15 January 2002.
Development of the Ability to read Words : Update By Linnea C. Ehri Presented by Pat Edwards & Hakim Shahid.
Reading. Reading Research Processes involved in reading –Orthography (the spelling of words) –Phonology (the sound of words) –Word meaning –Syntax –Higher-level.
CONFIDENCE – ACCURACY RELATIONS IN STUDENT PERFORMANCES We attempted to determine students’ ability to assess comprehension of course material. Students.
Language Comprehension reading
Language and Cognition Colombo 2011 Psycholinguistic Assessments of Language Processing in Aphasia - Writing With acknowledgement to Jane Marshall.
Spelling : Best Practices Kristan Bachner Ashley Smith Michele Renner By:
Liu, Perfetti, & Wang (2006) as summarized by Scott Hajek.
1 The role of the Arabic orthography in reading and spelling Salim Abu-Rabia University of Haifa.
Experimental study of morphological priming: evidence from Russian verbal inflection Tatiana Svistunova Elizaveta Gazeeva Tatiana Chernigovskaya St. Petersburg.
Electrophysiological Correlates of Repetition and Translation Priming in Different Script Bilinguals Noriko Hoshino 1, Katherine J. Midgley 1,2, Phillip.
Introduction Pinker and colleagues (Pinker & Ullman, 2002) have argued that morphologically irregular verbs must be stored as full forms in the mental.
1 by Catherine-Marie Longtin, Juan Segui, and Pierre A. Halle´ Laboratoire de Psychologie Expe´rimentale, CNRS, Universite´ Rene´ Descartes, Boulogne-
+ Treatment of Aphasia Week 12 April 1 st, Review Involvement of semantic and phonological stages in naming. Differentiating features of naming.

Reading. How do you think we read? -memorizing words on the page -extracting just the meanings of the words -playing a mental movie in our heads of what.
SLD Academy 2.0 Houston Independent School District.
Conceptual Hierarchies Arise from the Dynamics of Learning and Processing: Insights from a Flat Attractor Network Christopher M. O’ConnorKen McRaeGeorge.
Lexicon Organization: How are words stored? Atomist view  Words are stored in their full inflected form  talk –> talk  talked –> talked  toothbrush.
Age of acquisition and frequency of occurrence: Implications for experience based models of word processing and sentence parsing Marc Brysbaert.
As expected, a large N400 effect was observed for all 3 word types in both experiments, |ts|≥7.69, ps
Mental Organs. Phrenology was an important part of popular culture in Victorian England and in Europe during the 19th century.
Does the modality principle for multimedia learning apply to science classrooms? 指導教授: Chen Ming-Puu 報 告 者: Chen Hsiu-Ju 報告日期: Harskamp, E.
The effects of working memory load on negative priming in an N-back task Ewald Neumann Brain-Inspired Cognitive Systems (BICS) July, 2010.
Automated Reading Assistance System Using Point-of-Gaze Estimation M.A.Sc. Thesis Presentation Automated Reading Assistance System Using Point-of-Gaze.
Comparing the effectiveness of orthographic and phonological cues in the treatment of anomia. Lyndsey Nickels 1, Antje Lorenz 1,2, 1 Macquarie Centre for.
Introduction Can you read the following paragraph? Can we derive meaning from words even if they are distorted by intermixing words with numbers? Perea,
Phonological Priming and Lexical Access in Spoken Word Recognition Christine P. Malone Minnesota State University Moorhead.
The Cross-Script Length Effect: Evidence for Serial Processing in Reading Aloud Kathleen Rastle (Royal Holloway University of London), Linda Bayliss (Royal.
COGNITIVE MORPHOLOGY Laura Westmaas November 24, 2009.
Perception of Danger Signals: The Role of Control Jochen Brandtstadter, Andreas Voss, and Klaus Rothermund.
Serial Processing in the Assembly of Phonology from Print
Projection and the Reality of Routines – reflections of a computational modeller Bruce Edmonds Centre for Policy Modelling Manchester Metropolitan University.
Chapter 11 Language. Some Questions to Consider How do we understand individual words, and how are words combined to create sentences? How can we understand.
Exam Questions & Mark Schemes
Innovative Approaches to Displaying Words -- The effect of segmentation on word identification Yu-Chi Tai, Shun-nan Yang, John R. Hayes, & James Sheedy.
Lab 4: Pseudo-homophones They sound like words, but they aren’t.
VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION. What is Word Recognition? Features, letters & word interactions Interactive Activation Model Lexical and Sublexical Approach.
Body Position Influences Maintenance of Objects in Visual Short-Term Memory Mia J. Branson, Joshua D. Cosman, and Shaun P. Vecera Department of Psychology,
Constraints on definite article alternation in speech production: To “thee” or not to “thee”? By M. GARETH GASKELL, HELEN COX, KATHERINE FOLEY, HELEN GRIEVE,
Semantic Priming Effects in a Bilingual Gujarati Speaker
Phonological Priming and Lexical Access in Spoken Word Recognition
The role of the Arabic orthography in reading and spelling
The what, where, when, and how of visual word recognition
Verb Activation through Priming at the Syntax-Semantics Interface
subtractive methodology
Seidenberg Reading Demo
Phonological Priming and Lexical Access in Spoken Word Recognition
Cognitive profile of higher education students with dyslexia
Bruce & Young’s model of face recognition (1986)
Presentation transcript:

The role of phonology in visual word recognition and reading Marc Brysbaert

Reading silently  Recent skill (not before IX century; may require spaces between words)  Takes some time in the development (children first read aloud; also high degree of learning problems and failure, certainly in English)

Reading silently (cont.)  Silent reading goes faster than reading aloud ( words per minute, depending on reader, text, and goal)  People remember more after silent reading than after reading aloud.  Once mastered very powerful skill, because then reading becomes automatic (cf. Stroop effect)

Reading silently (cont.)  Not purely based on visual information inner voice phonological loop in working memory errors in proofreading particularly frequent for homophones and mute letters tongue-twister effect (e.g., “Boris burned the brown bread badly.”). Also in Chinese (Zhang & Perfetti, 1993)

Addressed phonology vs. assembled phonology  Given that phonological coding plays an important part in reading, where does the coding take place: before or after the word is recognised?  Originally (1970s) many researchers thought “before” (implicit speech in reading)  Gradually, shift to “after” or “a combination”.

Addressed phonology vs. assembled phonology  Important element: the development of the dual-route theory (Coltheart, 1978, 1993, 2001)  Latest version: the DRC-model (Coltheart et al., 2001)

print speech Feature Representations Letter Representations Orthographic Lexicon Phonological Lexicon Phoneme Representations Rule-Based Translation Semantic Representations DRC

Addressed phonology vs. assembled phonology  DRC = a weak phonological theory bulk of visual word recognition is orthographically based GPC-route is slow and serial (from the word beginning to the word end) GPC-route activates the wrong phonology for irregular words (e.g., “pint”) The position of irregularity effect (e.g., Roberts et al., 2003: more difference in naming times between “bind” and “bluff” (2nd position) than between “beige” and “bless” (3rd position)

Addressed phonology vs. assembled phonology  Addressed phonology = phonology activated on the basis of word representations in the orthographic lexicon  Assembled phonology = phonology activated on the basis of direct letter- sound correspondences (grapheme- phoneme conversions)

Evidence for the importance of phonology in isolated visual word recognition  Rubenstein et al. (1971): it takes longer to reject a pseudohomophone (“brane”) in a lexical decision task  Van Orden (1987): many false alarms with homophones in semantic decision (e.g., “rows” is a flower), in particular with brief presentation duration (prevents spelling check)

Evidence for the importance of phonology in isolated visual word recognition  Lesch & Pollatsek (1993): it takes longer to decide that “sand-beech” are unrelated than that “sand-bench” are unrelated  Same finding with “pillow-bead”

Evidence for the importance of assembled phonology in visual word recognition  Many of the findings thus far might be explained on the basis of addressed phonology.  If we want to show the importance of assembled phonology, we have to work with non-words, that do not have a lexical representation  Perfetti & Bell (1991): masked priming

Perfetti & Bell (1991)  three types of primes for target RATE: rait (pseudohomophone), ralt (graphemic control), busk (unrelated control)  Procedure: prime in lower case (25, 35, 45, 55, or 65 ms) TARGET in upper case (30 ms) XXXXXX mask task = perceptual identification “which word was presented in capitals?”

Perfetti & Bell (1991)  Findings: Phonological priming is possible with pseudohomophones; so, it is non-lexical (i.e., assembled phonology) It takes some time before the phonological code is computed (45 ms)

Ferrand & Grainger (1994)  A further look at the time course of phonological activation and see whether this is the same for orthographic information  French language: has many homophones, that can be written differently  mert-MERE vs. mair-MERE vs. toul-MERE

Ferrand & Grainger (1994)  Procedure: ###### (500 ms) prime (14, 29, 43, 57 ms) TARGET (until lexical decision)  Lexical decision is better than perceptual identification, because a more on-line task  orthographic priming: mert vs. mair  phonological priming: mair vs. toul

Brysbaert (2001)  To show that phonological priming is automatic, you have to create conditions where the use of the phonological code is negative  Procedure of Perfetti & Bell (1991) with perceptual identification; 43 ms prime  Two conditions with 60% fillers for which the targets were either preceded by pseudohomophonic primes (ieb-IEP) or by pseudohomophones of another word (gad-IEP)

Lukatela & Turvey (1994)  Phonological priming is not limited to form priming, you also find it for associative priming  Prime duration 50 ms, word naming  toad-FROG = towed-FROG = tode-FROG < tolled-FROG or tord-FROG

Drieghe & Brysbaert, 2002  First replicated Lukatela & Turvey (57 ms)

Drieghe & Brysbaert, 2002  Extended it to LDT (57 ms)

Drieghe & Brysbaert, 2002  LDT( 258 ms)

Strong phonological theories  “...we take the primary and initial source of lexical activation in English to be phonological. The role of orthographic codes is then taken to be that of refining the lexical activation begun by phonology” (Lukatela & Turvey, 1994a, p. 108).

Strong phonological theories (cont.)  “Over the last two decades, a number of studies using brief-stimulus-presentation and masked-stimulus-presentation paradigms have reported phonological effects in visual word identification.... These effects have been taken as major evidence for a rapid, automatic, and obligatory phonological process during lexical access.” (Xu & Perfetti, 1999, p. 26).

Strong phonological theories (cont.)  “The consistent evidence for phonological computation, its role in lexical access when the minimality constraint is taken into account, the manner in which phonology is assembled from print and shaped into a detailed representation, and the basic role of phonological structures in conveying meaning all suggest that the role of phonology is more important than dual-route models have assumed.” (Frost, 1998, p.95)

Strong phonological theories (cont.)  Brysbaert (2001) “Now that the existence of mandatory prelexical phonology assembly has been demonstrated, the logical next question is what this code looks like.”  Drieghe & Brysbaert (2002) “ Our data add further support to the strong phonological theory of visual word recognition, which claims that the stored lexico-semantic information requires a phonological access code.”

Strong phonological theories (cont.)  Coltheart, Rastle, Perry, Langdon, & Ziegler (2001) “Potential problems for the DRC model: Masked phonological priming effects” “… there currently exist some difficulties concerning exactly what the effects are that would need to be simulated. …” “Hence the implementation of a computational account of masking effects in the DRC would need to be accompanied by considerable further empirical work…”

Rastle & Brysbaert (2006)  Despite the previous evidence many researchers still not convinced about the importance of phonological coding in English  Rastle & Brysbaert: meta-analysis of previous research in English + two new, fully controlled studies  Task = lexical decision (stronger than naming + can be modelled in DRC)

First new Lexical Decision Experiment  Two types of primes : phonological (pharm - FARM; korce - COARSE) and graphemic controls (gharm - FARM; roipe - COARSE)  Selected from the ARC Nonword Database (Rastle et al., 2002)  Same number of overlapping letters both on matching and non-matching positions  phonological primes do not activate the targets to a higher degree in any component of DRC

First new Lexical Decision Experiment (cont.)  112 word trials and 112 non-word trials (also with phononological and graphemic control primes)  42 participants  presentation with DMDX (Forster & Forster, 2003)  trial : ########500 ms prime58 ms TARGETuntil response

First new Lexical Decision Experiment (cont.)  Results: phoncontreffect 603 ms617 ms14 ms 5.8%7.5%1.7%  No effect of orthographic similarity prime - target

Second new Lexical Decision Experiment (rationale)  In Experiment 1 (and all published experiments) only word trials preceded by pseudohomophones of existing words pharm FARM gharm FARM whone WONE sowd GOWD pharm FARM gharm FARM phite FITE biss BUSS Phonology uninformative both for word/non-word decision and for the target that will follow a particular type of prime

Second new Lexical Decision Experiment (cont.)  112 words and 112 pseudo-homophones (both with phononological and graphemic control primes)  80 participants  procedure same as in Experiment 1 (SOA = 58 ms)  after the experiment, session run again and this time participants tried to indicate whether the prime had been a pseudohomophone or a control (at chance)

Second new Lexical Decision Experiment (cont.)  Results: phoncontreffect 634 ms643 ms9 ms 5.8%6.4%0.6%  No effect of orthographic similarity prime - target

Conclusions Rastle & Brysbaert (2006)  Despite some justified concerns about the previous evidence, masked phonological priming effect in lexical decision is real  The effect is rather small (d =.30)  The effect does not depend on the orthographic similarity of prime and target  Is this evidence against a weak phonological model like DRC?

Conclusions Rastle & Brysbaert (2006)  DRC simulates LDT by looking either at the orthographic activation of the most active word node or at the total activity in the orthographic lexicon.  Different simulations show that it is impossible to find a parameter set that at the same time predicts phonological priming and correct reading of irregular words.

Conclusions Rastle & Brysbaert (2006)  The situation looks much better when we look at the activity of the phonological lexicon.  There we see clear phonological priming.  However, is it possible to make a word/ pseudohomophone decision on the basis of this lexicon? (researchers always assumed this was not possible)

Conclusions Rastle & Brysbaert (2006)  In a weak phonological model, the activation of phonology is much stronger for a word than for a pseudohomophone, because a word also activates the phonology via the orthographic lexicon.  So, the masked phonological priming effect is not really evidence against a weak phonological model.

A new challenge: The transposed letter priming effect  How to reconcile the findings with transposed letters (fiary-TALES) with the use of phonology?  Perea & Carreiras (2006): Is it also possible to have transposed letter priming with pseudohomophones?  In Spanish “v” and “b” sound the same; so “rebolucion” is a pseudohomophone of “revolucion”

A new challenge: The transposed letter priming effect  Will “relubocion” then also prime “REVOLUCION”?  50 ms priming, LDT  results reloducion-REVOLUCION585 ms reluvocion-REVOLUCION570 ms relubocion-REVOLUCION585 ms  Conclusion: TL-effect is orthographic

A new challenge: The transposed letter priming effect  Grainger et al. (2006)  Letter position effects are part of the orthographic route (cf. Grainger & Ferrand’s findings of the time course of orthography and phonology)  Therefore, letter position effects should be stronger for short prime durations than for long prime durations  33 ms prime duration vs. 83 ms

A new challenge: The transposed letter priming effect (Grainger et al., 2006)  33 ms prime duration slne-SILENCE:577 ms brma-SILENCE:597 ms  83 ms prime duration slne-SILENCE:613 ms brma-SILENCE:610 ms

Reading list  Frost, R. (1998). Toward a strong phonological theory of visual word recognition: True issues and false trails. Psychological Bulletin, 123,  Rastle, K. & Brysbaert, M. (2006). Masked phonological priming effects in English: Are they real? Do they matter? Cognitive Psychology, 53,