The Word-length Effect and Disyllabic Words
Authors:
Peter Lovatt;
S. E. Avons; Jackie Masterson
DOI:
10.1080/713755877
Publication Frequency:
8 issues per year
Published in:
The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A,
Volume
53,
Issue
1
February
2000
, pages 1
- 22
Number of References: 62
Formats available:
PDF
(English)
Now published as: The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
The circumstances under which this title is published have changed:
Reason for change: merged
Date of change: 2006
New ISSN: 1747-0218
New EISSN: 1747-1226
View Article:
View Article (PDF)
Abstract
Three experiments compared immediate serial recall of disyllabic words that differed on spoken duration. Two sets of long- and short-duration words were selected, in each case maximizing duration differences but matching for frequency, familiarity, phonological similarity, and number of phonemes, and controlling for semantic associations. Serial recall measures were obtained using auditory and visual presentation and spoken and picture-pointing recall. In Experiments 1a and 1b, using the first set of items, long words were better recalled than short words. In Experiments 2a and 2b, using the second set of items, no difference was found between long and short disyllabic words. Experiment 3 confirmed the large advantage for short-duration words in the word set originally selected by Baddeley, Thomson, and Buchanan (1975). These findings suggest that there is no reliable advantage for short-duration disyllables in span tasks, and that previous accounts of a word-length effect in disyllables are based on accidental differences between list items. The failure to find an effect of word duration casts doubt on theories that propose that the capacity of memory span is determined by the duration of list items or the decay rate of phonological information in short-term memory.
|
| view references (62) |

Download Citation
CiteULike
Del.icio.us
BibSonomy
Connotea