G
Guy C. Van Orden
Researcher at University of Cincinnati
Publications - 75
Citations - 7436
Guy C. Van Orden is an academic researcher from University of Cincinnati. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phonology & Lexical decision task. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 75 publications receiving 7094 citations. Previous affiliations of Guy C. Van Orden include Arizona State University & University of California, San Diego.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A ROWS is a ROSE: Spelling, sound, and reading
TL;DR: This paper found that students responded to stimulus foils that were homophonic to category exemplars (e.g., ROWS for the category A FLOWER) than when they responded to spelling control foils.
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Self-organization of cognitive performance.
TL;DR: Two experiments demonstrate 1/f scaling (pink noise) in simple reaction times and speeded word naming times, which round out a catalog of laboratory task demonstrations that background noise is pink noise.
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Word identification in reading and the promise of subsymbolic psycholinguistics.
TL;DR: An alternative subsymbolic approach that includes a central role for the process of phonologic coding is developed around a covariant learning hypothesis, derived from a design principle common to current learning algorithms within the subsympolic paradigm.
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Phonological Processing Skills and Deficits in Adult Dyslexics
TL;DR: A clear deficit in phoneme awareness was found in both Dyslexic groups, with each dyslexic group performing significantly worse than both CA and RA controls, which uniquely accounted for substantial variance in nonword reading.
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Synchronized arousal between performers and related spectators in a fire-walking ritual
Ivana Konvalinka,Dimitris Xygalatas,Joseph Bulbulia,Uffe Schjødt,Else-Marie Elmholdt Jegindø,Sebastian Wallot,Guy C. Van Orden,Andreas Roepstorff +7 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a collective ritual may evoke synchronized arousal over time between active participants and bystanders, and offers a unique approach for the quantification of social effects on human physiology during real-world interactions.