The contrastive value of lexical stress in visual word recognition: evidence from Spanish
Fecha
2018Resumen
Background: Many pairs of words in Spanish, in particular many verbal
forms, differ only in the syllable stressed, such as aNImo (I encourage)
and aniMÓ (he encouraged). Consequently, word stress may acquire a
lexical contrastive value that has been confi rmed by Dupoux, Pallier,
Sebastian, and Mehler (1997) for Spanish speakers though not for French
speakers in auditory perception. Method: This study contrasts the priming
effect produced by pairs of written words that differ only in their stress
pattern with the priming effect in repetition priming, stress only priming
(with no orthographic relation), and morphological priming, in visual
word recognition. Results: The results, using short and masked prime
presentation, showed facilitation for different stress (orthographically
identical) pairs (rasGÓ/RASgo) compared to totally unrelated pairs
(dorMÍ/RASgo) but no facilitation compared to orthographically unrelated
(but stress related) pairs (PERsa/RASgo). However, identity pairs (RASgoRASgo) produced facilitation compared to both orthographically unrelated
conditions. At long SOA, orthographically related (stress unrelated) pairs
produced signifi cant facilitation, as occurred with morphologically related
pairs (RASga/RASgo), on the orthographically unrelated words (PERsa/
RASgo). Conclusion: These results confi rm the early and prelexical
importance of word stress for lexical selection in Spanish, as is the case
with orthographic and phonological features.