2008
DOI: 10.5265/jcogpsy.5.93
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Encoding times for phonograms in English and Japanese readers: Eliminating the time for attention switching

Abstract: In our previous letter-matching experiments with native English and Japanese readers employing phonograms as stimuli, physical-matching reaction times (RTs) for Japanese readers were the shortest. We hypothesized that the heavy reliance of Japanese readers on visual codes in processing Kanji dominant texts extends to the processing of phonograms, which leads to short visual encoding times. However, all matching RTs at shorter inter-stimulus intervals (ISIs) were prolonged due to some factor other than encoding… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…The more uncertain people are about when a stimulus will appear, the slower they are to indicate its presence when it does appear. Mizuno, Matsui, Harman, and Bellezza (2008) and Mizuno and Matsui (2009) have previously shown the relevance of temporal uncertainty thus measured to performance on other attention tasks (attentional blink and letter matching). This study, therefore, measured not only negative priming, but also the simple reaction times in the appearance of the targets in Conway's pseudo-between-block design.…”
mentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The more uncertain people are about when a stimulus will appear, the slower they are to indicate its presence when it does appear. Mizuno, Matsui, Harman, and Bellezza (2008) and Mizuno and Matsui (2009) have previously shown the relevance of temporal uncertainty thus measured to performance on other attention tasks (attentional blink and letter matching). This study, therefore, measured not only negative priming, but also the simple reaction times in the appearance of the targets in Conway's pseudo-between-block design.…”
mentioning
confidence: 91%