A Characterisation of the Word Superiority Effect in a Case of Letter-by-letter Surface Alexia
An important characteristic of the word superiority effect (WSE) observed in normal subjects is that it extends to words displayed in mixed-case letters, e.g. fAdE is better identified than gAdE (McClelland,
1976). Because upper- and lower-case letters are treated as functionally equivalent within the orthographic system (e.g. "A"/"a" map onto abstract letter identities; Coltheart, 1981),
it is often argued that orthographic codes mediate the WSE . In the present paper, we report an intact WSE in a letter-by-letter surface alexic (IH) when words and "word-like" pseudowords were
displayed quickly and then masked. Consistent with the claim that orthographic codes mediated these effects, the WSE extended to words typed in mixed-case letters, and IH failed to show a WSE for the same
class of words for which he has impaired orthographic knowledge; namely, low frequency words. Based on these results, we argue that IH gains better access to orthographic knowledge than current theories
of letter-by-letter reading would predict.
Document Type: Research Article
Publication date: 01 April 1996
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