par Chetail, Fabienne ;Mathey, Stéphanie
Référence Canadian journal of experimental psychology, 63, 1, page (40-48)
Publication Publié, 2009
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : This study investigated the role of the syllable in visual recognition of French words. The syllable congruency procedure was combined with masked priming in the lexical decision task (Experiments 1 and 3) and the naming task (Experiment 2). Target words were preceded by a nonword prime sharing the first three letters that either corresponded to the syllable (congruent condition), or not (incongruent condition). When primes were displayed for 67 ms, similar results were found in both the lexical decision and the naming tasks. Consonant-vowel targets such as BA.LANCE were recognized more rapidly in the congruent condition than in the incongruent and control conditions, while consonant-vowel-consonant targets such as BAL.CON were recognized more rapidly in the congruent and incongruent conditions than in the control condition. When a 43-ms SOA was used in the lexical decision task, no significant priming effect was obtained. The results are discussed in an interactive-activation model incorporating syllable units.