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      Effects of Age-of-Acquisition in the Word-Fragment Completion Task : Evidence for an Orthographic Locus in Implicit Memory

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          Abstract

          Barry, Hirsh, Johnston, and Williams (2001) found that Age-of-Acquisition (AoA) interacted with repetition priming in the picture naming task (greater priming for late- than for early-acquired words), and proposed that AoA might affect the stage of access to lexical-phonological representations. The present experiment examined the possibility that AoA may influence the retrieval of visual-orthographic information, by studying its effects in the Word-Fragment Completion Task (WFCT). Results showed that the overall percentages of correct completion were greater for early- than for late-acquired words, while repetition priming was higher for late- than for early-acquired items. Furthermore, the interaction between AoA and WFCT priming remained significant even when the fragments were exposed for only 4 s, reducing possible contributions from phonological and semantic processes. These findings suggest that AoA can affect implicit memory by facilitating the retrieval of the orthographic properties of the studied words.

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          Most cited references48

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          Levels of processing versus transfer appropriate processing

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            On the relationship between autobiographical memory and perceptual learning.

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              A distributed, developmental model of word recognition and naming.

              A parallel distributed processing model of visual word recognition and pronunciation is described. The model consists of sets of orthographic and phonological units and an interlevel of hidden units. Weights on connections between units were modified during a training phase using the back-propagation learning algorithm. The model simulates many aspects of human performance, including (a) differences between words in terms of processing difficulty, (b) pronunciation of novel items, (c) differences between readers in terms of word recognition skill, (d) transitions from beginning to skilled reading, and (e) differences in performance on lexical decision and naming tasks. The model's behavior early in the learning phase corresponds to that of children acquiring word recognition skills. Training with a smaller number of hidden units produces output characteristic of many dyslexic readers. Naming is simulated without pronunciation rules, and lexical decisions are simulated without accessing word-level representations. The performance of the model is largely determined by three factors: the nature of the input, a significant fragment of written English; the learning rule, which encodes the implicit structure of the orthography in the weights on connections; and the architecture of the system, which influences the scope of what can be learned.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                zea
                Experimental Psychology
                Hogrefe Publishing
                1618-3169
                2190-5142
                July 2011
                2012
                : 59
                : 1
                : 22-29
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, University of Rome “Sapienza”, Italy
                [ 2 ] Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
                [ 3 ] Department of Psychology, University of Rome “Sapienza”, Italy
                Author notes
                Pietro Spataro, Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, University “Sapienza”, Rome, Via dei Marsi 78, 00185 + 39 06 4991-7513 + 39 06 4991-7711 pietro.spataro@ 123456uniroma1.it
                Article
                zea_59_1_22
                10.1027/1618-3169/a000121
                21768067
                2f0de2a1-3dc6-42fd-8e2c-016aaab774ee
                Copyright @ 2011
                History
                : October7, 2010
                : April1, 2011
                : April4, 2011
                Categories
                Research Article

                Psychology,General behavioral science
                attention,implicit memory,age-of-acquisition,word fragment completion

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