AGE OF ACQUISITION, NOT WORD-FREQUENCY, AFFECTS OBJECT NAMING, NOT OBJECT RECOGNITION

被引:281
作者
MORRISON, CM [1 ]
ELLIS, AW [1 ]
QUINLAN, PT [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV YORK, DEPT PSYCHOL, YORK YO1 5DD, N YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
关键词
D O I
10.3758/BF03202720
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Word frequency is widely believed to affect object naming speed, despite several studies in which it has been reported that frequency effects may be redundant upon age of acquisition. We report, first, a reanalysis of data from the study by Oldfield and Wingfield (1965), which is standardly cited as evidence for a word frequency effect in object naming; then we report two new experiments. The reanalysis of Oldfield and Wingfield shows that age of acquisition is the major determinant of naming speed, and that frequency plays no independent role when its correlation with other variables is taken into account. In Experiment 1, age of acquisition and phoneme length proved to be the primary determinants of object naming speed. Frequency, prototypicality, and imageability had no independent effect. In Experiment 2, subjects classified objects into two semantic categories (natural or man-made). Prototypicality and semantic category were the only variables to have a significant effect on reaction time, with no effect of age of acquisition, frequency, imageability, or word length. We conclude that age of acquisition, not word frequency, affects the retrieval and/or execution of object names, not the process of object recognition. The locus of this effect is discussed, along with the possibility that words learned in early childhood may be more resistant to the effects of brain injury in at least some adult aphasics than words learned somewhat later.
引用
收藏
页码:705 / 714
页数:10
相关论文
共 55 条
[41]  
RIDDOCH MJ, 1987, VISUAL OBJECT PROCES, P107
[42]   STUDIES IN DEVELOPMENT AND BREAKDOWN OF USE OF NAMES .4. EFFECTS OF WORD FREQUENCY [J].
ROCHFORD, G ;
WILLIAMS, M .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1965, 28 (05) :407-+
[43]   STUDIES IN DEVELOPMENT AND BREAKDOWN OF USE OF NAMES .1. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NOMINAL DYSPHASIA AND ACQUISITION OF VOCABULARY IN CHILDHOOD [J].
ROCHFORD, G ;
WILLIAMS, M .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1962, 25 (03) :222-&
[44]   51 PROPERTIES OF 125 WORDS - A UNIT ANALYSIS OF VERBAL-BEHAVIOR [J].
RUBIN, DC .
JOURNAL OF VERBAL LEARNING AND VERBAL BEHAVIOR, 1980, 19 (06) :736-755
[45]   THE WORD-FREQUENCY EFFECT AND LEXICAL ACCESS [J].
SEGUI, J ;
MEHLER, J ;
FRAUENFELDER, U ;
MORTON, J .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1982, 20 (06) :615-627
[46]  
SEYMOUR PHK, 1979, HUMAN VISUAL COGNITI
[47]   STANDARDIZED SET OF 260 PICTURES - NORMS FOR NAME AGREEMENT, IMAGE AGREEMENT, FAMILIARITY, AND VISUAL COMPLEXITY [J].
SNODGRASS, JG ;
VANDERWART, M .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN LEARNING AND MEMORY, 1980, 6 (02) :174-215
[48]   PSYCHOLINGUISTIC ASPECTS OF APHASIA [J].
SPREEN, O .
JOURNAL OF SPEECH AND HEARING RESEARCH, 1968, 11 (03) :467-&
[49]   FREQUENCY AND THE LEXICAL STORAGE OF REGULARLY INFLECTED FORMS [J].
STEMBERGER, JP ;
MACWHINNEY, B .
MEMORY & COGNITION, 1986, 14 (01) :17-26
[50]   THEORETICAL-ANALYSIS OF THE COGNITIVE PROCESSING OF LEXICAL AND PICTORIAL STIMULI - READING, NAMING, AND VISUAL AND CONCEPTUAL COMPARISONS [J].
THEIOS, J ;
AMRHEIN, PC .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1989, 96 (01) :5-24