4 results match your criteria: "The Netherlands. r.verdonschot@hum.leidenuniv.nl[Affiliation]"

Morphological priming survives a language switch.

Cognition

September 2012

Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.

In a long-lag morphological priming experiment, Dutch (L1)-English (L2) bilinguals were asked to name pictures and read aloud words. A design using non-switch blocks, consisting solely of Dutch stimuli, and switch-blocks, consisting of Dutch primes and targets with intervening English trials, was administered. Target picture naming was facilitated by morphologically related primes in both non-switch and switch blocks with equal magnitude.

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The functional unit of Japanese word naming: evidence from masked priming.

J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn

November 2011

Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition and Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, Faculty of Humanities, Leiden University, P. O. Box 9555, NL-2300 RB Leiden, The Netherlands.

Theories of language production generally describe the segment as the basic unit in phonological encoding (e.g., Dell, 1988; Levelt, Roelofs, & Meyer, 1999).

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Homophonic context effects when naming Japanese kanji: evidence for processing costs?

Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)

September 2011

Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition & Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.

The current study investigated the effects of phonologically related context pictures on the naming latencies of target words in Japanese and Chinese. Reading bare words in alphabetic languages has been shown to be rather immune to effects of context stimuli, even when these stimuli are presented in advance of the target word (e.g.

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Semantic context effects when naming Japanese kanji, but not Chinese hànzì.

Cognition

June 2010

Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition & Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.

The process of reading aloud bare nouns in alphabetic languages is immune to semantic context effects from pictures. This is accounted for by assuming that words in alphabetic languages can be read aloud relatively fast through a sub-lexical grapheme-phoneme conversion (GPC) route or by a direct route from orthography to word form. We examined semantic context effects in a word-naming task in two languages with logographic scripts for which GPC cannot be applied: Japanese kanji and Chinese hànzì.

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