Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.

In recent years, psycholinguistics has seen a remarkable growth of research based on the analysis of data from large-scale studies of word recognition, in particular lexical decision and word naming. We present the data of the Dutch Lexicon Project (DLP) in which a group of 39 participants made lexi...

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Main Authors: Emmanuel eKeuleers, Kevin eDiependaele, Marc eBrysbaert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2010-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00174/full
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spelling doaj-9ad45a7d680149eb9aa9aeb12049bc982020-11-24T22:25:08ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782010-11-01110.3389/fpsyg.2010.001742082Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.Emmanuel eKeuleers0Kevin eDiependaele1Marc eBrysbaert2Ghent UniversityGhent UniversityGhent UniversityIn recent years, psycholinguistics has seen a remarkable growth of research based on the analysis of data from large-scale studies of word recognition, in particular lexical decision and word naming. We present the data of the Dutch Lexicon Project (DLP) in which a group of 39 participants made lexical decisions to 14,000 words and the same number of nonwords. To examine whether the extensive practice precludes comparison with the traditional short experiments, we look at the differences between the first and the last sesssion, compare the results with the English Lexicon Project (ELP) and the French Lexicon Project (FLP), and examine to what extent established findings in Dutch psycholinguistics can be replicated in virtual experiments. Our results show that when good nonwords are used, practice effects are minimal in lexical decision experiments and do not invalidate the behavioral data. For instance, the word frequency curve is the same in DLP as in ELP and FLP. Also, the Dutch-English cognate effect is the same in DLP as in a previously published factorial experiment. This means that large-scale word recognition studies can make use of psychophysical and psychometrical approaches. In addition, our data represent an important collection of very long series of individual reaction times that may be of interest to researchers in other areas.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00174/fullReaction Timevisual word recognitiondutchlexical decisionmegastudypractice effect
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emmanuel eKeuleers
Kevin eDiependaele
Marc eBrysbaert
spellingShingle Emmanuel eKeuleers
Kevin eDiependaele
Marc eBrysbaert
Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.
Frontiers in Psychology
Reaction Time
visual word recognition
dutch
lexical decision
megastudy
practice effect
author_facet Emmanuel eKeuleers
Kevin eDiependaele
Marc eBrysbaert
author_sort Emmanuel eKeuleers
title Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.
title_short Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.
title_full Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.
title_fullStr Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.
title_full_unstemmed Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: A lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.
title_sort practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies: a lexical decision study on 14,000 dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2010-11-01
description In recent years, psycholinguistics has seen a remarkable growth of research based on the analysis of data from large-scale studies of word recognition, in particular lexical decision and word naming. We present the data of the Dutch Lexicon Project (DLP) in which a group of 39 participants made lexical decisions to 14,000 words and the same number of nonwords. To examine whether the extensive practice precludes comparison with the traditional short experiments, we look at the differences between the first and the last sesssion, compare the results with the English Lexicon Project (ELP) and the French Lexicon Project (FLP), and examine to what extent established findings in Dutch psycholinguistics can be replicated in virtual experiments. Our results show that when good nonwords are used, practice effects are minimal in lexical decision experiments and do not invalidate the behavioral data. For instance, the word frequency curve is the same in DLP as in ELP and FLP. Also, the Dutch-English cognate effect is the same in DLP as in a previously published factorial experiment. This means that large-scale word recognition studies can make use of psychophysical and psychometrical approaches. In addition, our data represent an important collection of very long series of individual reaction times that may be of interest to researchers in other areas.
topic Reaction Time
visual word recognition
dutch
lexical decision
megastudy
practice effect
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00174/full
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AT kevinediependaele practiceeffectsinlargescalevisualwordrecognitionstudiesalexicaldecisionstudyon14000dutchmonoanddisyllabicwordsandnonwords
AT marcebrysbaert practiceeffectsinlargescalevisualwordrecognitionstudiesalexicaldecisionstudyon14000dutchmonoanddisyllabicwordsandnonwords
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