Pronouncing printed words: investigating a semantic contribution to adult word reading

PhD Thesis


Cooper, Elisa 2013. Pronouncing printed words: investigating a semantic contribution to adult word reading. PhD Thesis University of East London School of Psychology https://doi.org/10.15123/PUB.3042
AuthorsCooper, Elisa
TypePhD Thesis
Abstract

When considering print-to-sound word reading, orthography and phonology are obviously
involved. However, another system, that of semantic memory, might also be involved in
orthography-to-phonology computation. Whether this occurs is debated in the literature
both in the interpretation of behavioural results (e.g., Monaghan & Ellis, 2002; Strain et al.,
1995) and in the implementation of semantic memory within computational models of word
reading (Coltheart et al., 2001; Plaut et al., 1996). The central aim of this thesis was to
investigate whether there is a semantic contribution to orthography-to-phonology
computation in healthy adult word reading. Experiments 1-4 used a semantic priming
design in which a picture prime was followed either two trials later (Experiments 1, 3, and 4)
or one trial later (Experiment 2) by a word target, and this investigated priming of various
word types. Regression investigations explored whether semantic features and imageability
were unique significant predictors of ELexicon single word reading reaction times while
statistically controlling for age-of-acquisition. The two ERP experiments (Experiments 5
and 6) investigated the neurocorrelates of imageability and semantic features and whether
there are semantic effects early in the time-course of low frequency word reading.
Experiments 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6 and the regression investigations show evidence of a semantic
contribution to low frequency regular and low frequency exception word reading. There is
also some suggestion of a semantic contribution to high frequency word reading
(Experiment 2 and Regression analyses). From the results of the three lines of investigation,
it is concluded that semantic information is involved in healthy adult word reading, and
these results are best accommodated by the connectionist triangle model of word reading.
These investigations also provide information concerning various word types and factors
that contribute to “easy” and “difficult” words, semantic memory models and their accounts
of priming, and the measures, age-of-acquisition, imageability, and semantic features.

Keywordsorthography; phonology; semantic memory
Year2013
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.15123/PUB.3042
Publication dates
PrintApr 2013
Publication process dates
Deposited08 Jul 2013
Publisher's version
License
CC BY-NC-ND
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