964 research outputs found
QJE-STD-19-254.R2-Supplementary_Material – Supplemental material for On the time it takes to judge grammaticality
Supplemental material, QJE-STD-19-254.R2-Supplementary_Material for On the time it takes to judge grammaticality by Jonathan Mirault and Jonathan Grainger in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology</p
MiraultSupplementalMaterial – Supplemental material for You That Read Wrong Again!: A Transposed-Word Effect in Grammaticality Judgments
Supplemental material, MiraultSupplementalMaterial for You That Read Wrong Again!: A Transposed-Word Effect in Grammaticality Judgments by Jonathan Mirault, Joshua Snell and Jonathan Grainger in Psychological Science</p
Procédures d'accès au lexique chez le bilingue
Beauvillain Cécile, Grainger Jonathan. Procédures d'accès au lexique chez le bilingue. In: Bulletin de psychologie, tome 39 n°375, 1986. Jugement et langage. Hommage à Georges Noizet. pp. 439-443
MiraultOpenPracticesDisclosure – Supplemental material for You That Read Wrong Again!: A Transposed-Word Effect in Grammaticality Judgments
Supplemental material, MiraultOpenPracticesDisclosure for You That Read Wrong Again!: A Transposed-Word Effect in Grammaticality Judgments by Jonathan Mirault, Joshua Snell and Jonathan Grainger in Psychological Science</p
sj-docx-1-qjp-10.1177_17470218231196823 – Supplemental material for When phonological neighbours cooperate during spoken sentence processing
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-qjp-10.1177_17470218231196823 for When phonological neighbours cooperate during spoken sentence processing by Sophie Dufour, Jonathan Mirault and Jonathan Grainger in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology</p
Unconscious semantic priming from pictures
Three experiments examined the effects of unconsciously presented picture primes on semantic categorization and naming responses to both word and picture targets. Picture naming and word categorization responses to targets were faster and more accurate when the picture primes belonged to the same semantic category as the targets, so called priming effect. No priming was found when subjects performed a word reading task. When priming was evident, no difference was found between responses to targets that were nominally identical to primes (e.g. the picture of a lion followed by either the word LION or the picture of a lion) compared with nominally different targets from the same semantic category as the primes (e.g. the picture of an ELEPHANT followed by either the word LION or the picture of a lion). Responding did not differ significantly from chance when subjects were asked to categorize the primes as natural objects vs. artifacts or as meaningful vs. meaningless objects in three distinct forced-choice unspeeded tasks
The role of letter identity and letter position in orthographic priming
Four experiments are reported investigating orthographic priming effects in French by varying the number and the position of letters shared by prime and target stimuli. Using both standard masked priming and the novel incremental priming technique (Jacobs, Grainger, & Ferrand, 1995), it is shown that net priming effects are affected not only by the number of letters shared by prime and target stim- uli but also by the number of letters in the prime not present in the target. Several null results are thus explained as a tradeoff between the facilitation generated by common letters and the inhibition gen- erated by different letters. Inhibition was significantly reduced when different letters were replaced by nonalphabetic symbols. Facilitation effects disappeared when the common letters did not have the same relative position in the prime and target strings, thus supporting a relative-position coding scheme for letters in words
Orthographic and phonological contributions to flanker effects
This repository stores the data of the two experiments reported in “Orthographic and phonological contributions to flanker effects” by Christophe Cauchi, Bernard Lété and Jonathan Grainger published in the journal Attention, Perception and Psychophysics
QJE-STD_17-048.R2-Supplementary_Material – Supplemental material for What’s special about orthographic processing? Further evidence from transposition effects in same-different matching
Supplemental material, QJE-STD_17-048.R2-Supplementary_Material for What’s special about orthographic processing? Further evidence from transposition effects in same-different matching by Maria Ktori, Daisy Bertrand and Jonathan Grainger in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology</p
Constraints on integration of orthographic information across multiple stimuli: Effects of contiguity, eccentricity, and attentional span
This repository stores the dataset, the statistcal analyses scripts and the stimuli selection scripts from the work titled “Integration of orthographic information across multiple stimuli : Effects of contiguity, eccentricity, and attentional span” by Colas Fournet, Christophe Cauchi and Jonathan Grainger (work in progress
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