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Encyclopedia of PerceptionPub. date: 2010 | Online Pub. Date: December 16, 2009 | DOI: 10.4135/9781412972000 | Print ISBN: 9781412940818 | Online ISBN: 9781412972000| Publisher:SAGE Publications, Inc.
About this encyclopediaWord Recognition
Delphine Dahan
Humans have the remarkable capacity to express their thoughts, beliefs, and intentions through a physical medium (sounds, gestures, or pictograms) to share with others. Language's expressive power resides in the ability to express any novel thought by combining elements (e.g., cow, purple, ticklish) into a sequence that conveys that thought (e.g., a ticklish purple cow). Thus, a critical component of language comprehension consists of recognizing the presence of these elements, the words, in the speaker's discourse in order to retrieve their individual meanings and combine them to derive an overall interpretation of the discourse. Research on word recognition has focused on understanding how people categorize a physical (auditory or visual) token as one of the many words they know. This entry first reviews the factors that affect the perceptual choice inherent to the recognition of spoken or printed words. It then discusses how people represent the forms of words they ...
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