Wooseok Choi, Tommaso Stecconi, et al.
Advanced Science
To investigate whether deaf readers use phonological information during sentence comprehension, deaf and hearing college students performed a semantic acceptability task on tongue-twister and control sentences. Indicative of phonological coding, subjects' responses were influenced by the phonetic content of the sentences they were reading and by the phonetic content of a concurrent memory load task. That is, the subjects in both groups made more errors in their acceptability judgments when reading tongue-twister than when reading control sentences. In addition, subjects in both groups made more errors when the tongue-twister sentences and concurrent memory load numbers were phonetically similar than when they were phonetically dissimilar. These results support theories that assign phonological processes an important role in reading. © 1991.
Wooseok Choi, Tommaso Stecconi, et al.
Advanced Science
Erik Altman, Jovan Blanusa, et al.
NeurIPS 2023
R. Sebastian, M. Weise, et al.
ECPPM 2022
Ken C.L. Wong, Satyananda Kashyap, et al.
Pattern Recognition Letters