Evidence for an automatic orthographic code in the processing of visually novel word forms (original) (raw)
Language and Cognitive Processes, 2010
Abstract
Some psycholinguistic theorists contend that lexical representations are intrinsically phonological, and that visual word recognition requires the matching of orthographic information to core phonological representations, while others postulate that in skilled readers orthographic and phonological representations attain a more equivalent status. We provide evidence for the latter position, showing that an automatically accessible orthographic representation for a phonologically familiar word
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