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Levels of processing during non-conscious perception: a critical review of visual masking
"... Understanding the extent and limits of non-conscious processing is an important step on the road to a thorough understanding of the cognitive and cerebral correlates of conscious perception. In this article, we present a critical review of research on subliminal perception during masking and other r ..."
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Understanding the extent and limits of non-conscious processing is an important step on the road to a thorough understanding of the cognitive and cerebral correlates of conscious perception. In this article, we present a critical review of research on subliminal perception during masking and other related experimental conditions. Although initially controversial, the possibility that a broad variety of processes can be activated by a non-reportable stimulus is now well established. Behavioural findings of subliminal priming indicate that a masked word or digit can have an influence on perceptual, lexical and semantic levels, while neuroimaging directly visualizes the brain activation that it evokes in several cortical areas. This activation is often attenuated under subliminal presentation conditions compared to consciously reportable conditions, but there are sufficiently many exceptions, in paradigms such as the attentional blink, to indicate that high activation, per se,is not a sufficient condition for conscious access to occur. We conclude by arguing that for a stimulus to reach consciousness, two factors are jointly needed: (i) the input stimulus must have enough strength (which can be prevented by masking) and (ii) it must receive top-down attention (which can be prevented by drawing attention to another stimulus or task). This view leads to a distinction between two types of non-conscious processes, which we call subliminal and preconscious. According to us, maintaining this distinction is essential in order to make sense of the growing neuroimaging data on the neural correlates of consciousness.
Running Head: SYLLABARIUM Address for correspondence:
"... The present article introduces SYLLABARIUM, a new web tool addressing linguists, psycholinguists, and cognitive scientists who work on Spanish and/or Basque and are interested in retrieving information about several syllable-related parameters. This new online syllabic database allows the user to ge ..."
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The present article introduces SYLLABARIUM, a new web tool addressing linguists, psycholinguists, and cognitive scientists who work on Spanish and/or Basque and are interested in retrieving information about several syllable-related parameters. This new online syllabic database allows the user to generate complete lists of Spanish and Basque syllables with information about the syllable frequency. Among other measures, for a given orthographic syllable SYLLABARIUM provides its number of occurrences (i.e., the type frequency), the summed lexical frequency of the words that contain this syllable (i.e., the token frequency), and the positional distribution of type and token frequencies. The crosslanguage feature of SYLLABARIUM is of special interest for researchers aiming to explore the influence of the syllable in bilingualism. The web tool is available at
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"... doi:10.3758/BRM.42.1.118 SYLLABARIUM: An online application for deriving complete statistics for Basque and Spanish orthographic syllables ..."
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doi:10.3758/BRM.42.1.118 SYLLABARIUM: An online application for deriving complete statistics for Basque and Spanish orthographic syllables
The time course of orthography and phonology: ERP correlates of masked priming effects in Spanish
"... One key issue for computational models of visual-word recognition is the time course of orthographic and phonological information during reading. Previous research, using both behavioral and event related brain potential (ERP) measures, has shown that orthographic codes are activated very early but ..."
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One key issue for computational models of visual-word recognition is the time course of orthographic and phonological information during reading. Previous research, using both behavioral and event related brain potential (ERP) measures, has shown that orthographic codes are activated very early but that phonological activation starts to occur immediately afterward. Here we report an ERP masked priming experiment in Spanish that investigates this issue further by using very strict control conditions. The critical phonological comparison was between two pairs of primes having the same orthographic similarity to the target words but differing in phonological similarity (e.g., conal-CANAL vs. cinal-CANAL vis à vis ponel-PANEL vs. pinel-PANEL), whereas the critical orthographic contrast was between pairs of primes that had the same phonological similarity to the target but differing in orthographic similarity (e.g., conal-CANAL vs. konal-CANAL). Orthographic priming was mainly observed in the 150–250-ms time window whereas phonological priming occurred in the 350–550-ms window. Descriptors: Visual word recognition, ERP, Orthography and phonology One critical issue for any model of visual word recognition and reading is the specification of the role of phonology during lexical access. To examine the influence of phonological effects during

