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The Effect of Word Length on Immediate Serial...
Journal article

The Effect of Word Length on Immediate Serial Recall Depends on Phonological Complexity, Not Articulatory Duration

Abstract

Immediate recall for sequences of short words is better than for sequences of long words. This word-length effect has been thought to depend on the spoken duration of the words (Baddeley, Thomson, & Buchanan, 1975) or their phonological complexity (Caplan, Rochon, & Waters, 1992). In Finnish both vowel and consonant quantity distinguish between words. Long phonemes behave like phoneme repetitions. In Experiment 1, subjects were presented with …

Authors

Service E

Journal

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, Vol. 51, No. 2, pp. 283–304

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

May 1998

DOI

10.1080/713755759

ISSN

1747-0218