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EXPRESS: The Orthographic/Phonological Neighbourhood Size Effect and Set Size.

Dominic GuitardLeonie MillerIan NeathSteven Roodenrys
Published in: Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006) (2023)
A growing number of studies have shown that on serial recall tests, words with more orthographic/phonological neighbours are better recalled than otherwise comparable words with fewer neighbours, the so-called neighbourhood size effect. Greeno et al. (2022) replicated this result when using a large stimulus pool but found a reverse neighbourhood size effect -- better recall of words with fewer rather than more neighbours -- when using a small stimulus pool. We report 3 registered experiments that further examine the role of set size in the neighbourhood size effect. Experiment 1 used the large pool from Greeno et al. and replicated their finding of a large neighbourhood advantage. Experiment 2 used the small pool from Greeno et al. but found no difference in recall between the large and small neighbourhood conditions. Experiment 3 also used a small pool but the small pool was randomly generated for each subject from the large pool used in Experiment 1. This resulted in a typical large neighbourhood advantage. We suggest that set size is not critical to the direction of the neighbourhood size effect, with a large neighbourhood advantage appearing with both small and large pools.
Keyphrases
  • working memory