Wawk on the wild side: Context-dependence of pseudohomophone processing

Stefanova, Vasilena and Scheepers, Christoph (2025) Wawk on the wild side: Context-dependence of pseudohomophone processing. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance. ISSN 0096-1523

[thumbnail of Final_Manuscript.pdf]
Preview
Text
Final_Manuscript.pdf - Accepted Version

Download (763kB)

Abstract

The pseudohomophone (PH) effect refers to an established finding whereby in a visual lexical decision task, nonword letter strings that are pronounced like real words (e.g., WAWK) are harder to reject than nonword strings that are not pronounced like real words (e.g., FLIS). This article reports three lexical decision experiments that aimed at further exploring the underlying processing mechanisms. In Experiments 1 and 2, we compared PHs like WAWK with unpronounceable nonwords like NRUG and pronounceable nonwords like FLIS, making sure that all stimuli (including real-word fillers) were carefully matched in length, bigram frequency, and number of orthographic neighbors. Matching stimuli in this way resulted in the real-word fillers to be of low lexical frequency (lower than for the PHs’ base words). Experiment 1 employed a standard lexical decision task, whereas Experiment 2 used the two-alternative forced choice eye-tracking paradigm originally developed in Kunert and Scheepers (2014). Both experiments converged on showing a reversal of the classical PH effect: while unpronounceable strings like NRUG were correctly rejected relatively quickly, PHs like WAWK were indeed easier to reject than pronounceable nonwords like FLIS. Our final Experiment 3, by contrast, confirmed a “classical” PH effect when the same nonword stimuli were tested against high- rather than low-frequency words as fillers. We conclude that the direction of the PH effect strongly depends on the overall material context.

Item Type: Article
Identification Number: 10.1037/xhp0001371
Dates:
Date
Event
3 July 2025
Accepted
28 August 2025
Published Online
Uncontrolled Keywords: lexical decision, pseudohomophone effect, non-linear modelling
Subjects: CAH04 - psychology > CAH04-01 - psychology > CAH04-01-01 - psychology (non-specific)
Divisions: Life and Health Sciences > Psychology
Depositing User: Gemma Tonks
Date Deposited: 17 Sep 2025 12:54
Last Modified: 17 Sep 2025 12:55
URI: https://www.open-access.bcu.ac.uk/id/eprint/16646

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Research

In this section...