“…Most of the uses center around the fact that homographs can be encoded in different ways. Because of this feature, homographs make excellent stimuli for experiments on set or priming (e.g., Cramer, 1968;Skanes & Donderi, 1973), encoding specificity (e.g., Goldstein, Schmitt, & Scheirer, 1978;Light & Carter-Sobell, 1970;Winograd & Conn, 1971), transfer (e.g., Hastroudi & Johnson, 1976Muller, Brown, & Kausler, 1975), imagery (e.g., Begg & Clark, 1975), frequency estimation (e.g., Geis & Winograd, 1975;Rowe, 1973), clustering (e.g., Kausler & Kamichoff, 1970), and cerebral laterality (Wollen, Cox, Coahran, & Shea, Note 1).…”