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Manuel Perea

Researcher at University of Valencia

Publications -  262
Citations -  10396

Manuel Perea is an academic researcher from University of Valencia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lexical decision task & Priming (psychology). The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 262 publications receiving 9254 citations. Previous affiliations of Manuel Perea include Universidad Católica de Valencia San Vicente Mártir & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Masked nonword repetition effects in yes/no and go/no-go lexical decision: a test of the evidence accumulation and deadline accounts.

TL;DR: Whether masked nonword priming effects are greater when the task involves an active go response to nonwords than when it involves the standard yes/no procedure in lexical decision is examined.
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Priming of abstract letter representations may be universal: The case of Arabic

TL;DR: The results showed masked repetition priming effects of the same magnitude for letter pairs with similar and with dissimilar visual features across letter positions that support the view that priming of abstract letter representations is a universal phenomenon.
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Does tonal information affect the early stages of visual-word processing in Thai?

TL;DR: The authors conducted a masked priming experiment to investigate the contribution of tone at the orthographic/phonological level during the early stages of word processing in Thai, using both lexical decision and word naming tasks.
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Do young readers have fast access to abstract lexical representations? Evidence from masked priming.

TL;DR: A masked priming lexical decision experiment with two groups of young readers found that response times for DIS and SIM words were very similar in the matched- and mismatched-case identity priming conditions, which is consistent with the idea that there is fast access to abstract representations.
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Are root letters compulsory for lexical access in Semitic languages? The case of masked form-priming in Arabic.

TL;DR: Examining whether masked form priming occurs in Arabic words when one of the letters from the productive root is replaced in the prime stimulus by another letter suggests that the processing of word forms in Semitic vs. Indo-European languages differs more at a quantitative than at a qualitative level.