Six experiments examined the possibility of obtaining a word-superiority effect (WSE) without the use of brief stimulus exposures or a poststimulus mask. In each experiment, subjects were presented a stimulus string and two alternative strings that differed by a single letter (Reicher, 1969). The alternatives and stimulus remained in view until subjects responded, and subjects were under no pressure to respond quickly. In Experiments 1-3, the stimuli were presented in very small type so that they were difficult to see. Subjects were significantly more accurate with words than with nonwords, letters embedded among digits, or letters embedded among number signs (#s). In Experiments 4 and 5, the stimuli were embedded in a simultaneously present pattern mask. Subjects were significantly more accurate with words than with single letters by themselves. In the final experiment, the stimuli were presented in a mask with specific spatial frequency characteristics, and performance was significantly better with words than with nonwords. The WSE is a more general phenomenon than previously supposed; it is not limited to a tachistoscopic exposure.Experiments in which visual stimuli are briefly presented in order to limit perfonnance are ubiquitous in experimental psychology. Instruments used to briefly present stimuli have included the electric spark generator, the gravity chronometer (Cattell, 1885), an oil lantern behind a photographic shutter (pillsbury, 1897), the tachistoscope, the point plotter, and the raster display of the familiar personal computer. Generically. these devices are known as T-scopes. Volumes of research have been based on the use of T-scopes, in one form or another.Despite the preponderance of this research, a few skeptics have questioned whether the results of T-scope experiments are informative about perception in more naturalistic settings. For example, Dodge (1907) likened studying vision with a brief exposure to perception in a thunderstorm. He contended not only that the results would fail to generalize to more naturalistic situations, but that the use of too brief an exposure would result in "making the conclusions not merely valueless but false" (p. 32). Katz (1925Katz ( /1989 complained that the frequent use of the T-scope led to a "tachistoscopic mentality." A more modem iconoclast, who was showing visitors his laboratory, is reported to have pointed to the room housing the tachistoscope and to have commented, "the devil lives there." It is true that we are rarely called upon to read briefly presented stimuli, except perhaps in a thunderstorm or in a discotheque with stroboscopic lighting.Nevertheless, research with brief exposures has led to many important findings, and so it may be rash to deni- grate this research. One of the best known of these findings, which is the subject of this paper, is Reicher's (1969) discovery of the word-superiority effect (WSE). Reicher briefly presented words, nonwords, or single-letter stimuli, followed by a visual noise mask. Subjects had to determine which...