23 results on '"García-Orza J"'
Search Results
2. Lexical effects in verbal STM: Evidences from a phonological output buffer patient
- Author
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García-Orza, J. and León-Carrión, J.
- Published
- 2005
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3. Soldadura de aleaciones de aluminio con láseres de Nd:YAG de alta potencia
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García Orza, J. A.
- Subjects
Aleaciones de aluminio ,Laser safety ,Seguridad láser ,Emisiones ,Aluminium alloys ,Byproducts ,Láseres de YAG de alta potencia ,Beam combination ,High-power YAG laser ,Combinación de haces - Abstract
Aluminium alloys have good mechanical properties (high strength-to-weight ratio, corrosion resistance) and good workability. Their applications are growing up, specially in the transportation industry. Weldability is however poorer than in other materials; recent advances in high power YAG lasers are the key to obtain good appearance welds and higher penetration, at industrial production rates. Results of the combination of high power YAG beams with small fiber diameters and specific filler wires are presented. It is also characterized the airborne particulated material, by-product of the laser process: emission rates, size distribution and chemical composition are given for several aluminium alloys. El uso del Al y sus aleaciones es creciente en la fabricación de vehículos de transporte. Su soldabilidad es menor que la de otros materiales y las aleaciones presentan cierta disminución de propiedades por pérdida de aleantes y/o de su tratamiento térmico. Se revisa brevemente el uso de láseres de Nd:YAG de potencia en soldeo de aleaciones de aluminio y se presentan resultados de la combinación de haces de potencia guiados por fibras de pequeño diámetro, con focos ligeramente superpuestos en la pieza. Finalmente, se caracterizan los humos producidos en la soldadura con láser continuo de 2 kW.
- Published
- 1998
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4. Dissociating Arabic Numeral Reading and Basic Calculation: A Case Study
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García-Orza, J., primary, León-Carrión, J., additional, and Vega, O., additional
- Published
- 2003
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5. Verbal and visual short-term memory predict performance in a multiplication production task: Evidence from a Malaysian sample.
- Author
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Soh ML, García-Orza J, Mennie NR, and Estudillo AJ
- Abstract
Arithmetic requires the use of multiple cognitive processes, such as short-term memory (STM). However, findings on the association between STM and simple multiplication solving are mixed, potentially due to large interindividual differences in multiplication proficiency within and between samples. The present study aims to explore further the relationship between visual and verbal STM and simple multiplication solving with a large Malaysian sample ( N = 230). Adults (age = 17-42) completed an online production-based multiplication-solving task, STM measures (verbal and visuospatial STM tasks), and a demographic survey. A mixed-model analysis found that verbal STM and visual STM predict multiplication performance, with lower span participants having longer reaction times during multiplication solving. Interestingly, we also observed the relationship between verbal STM and multiplication was moderated by interference, the impact of verbal STM was stronger in high-interference problems, while the visual STM-multiplication relation was moderated by problem size, high visual span participants took more advantage of their visual STM when presented with large size problems. Thus, our findings show that both verbal and visual STM in interaction with problem properties predict simple multiplication solving in adults. Hypotheses on the concrete mechanisms involved in these relationships are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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6. Children's comparison of different-length numbers: Managing different attributes in multidigit number processing.
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García-Orza J, Gutiérrez-Cordero I, Rodríguez-Montenegro I, and Álvarez-Montesinos JA
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- Child, Humans, Reaction Time, Mathematical Concepts
- Abstract
In everyday life the comparison of numbers usually occurs between numbers with different numbers of digits. However, experimental research here is scarce. Recent research has shown that adults respond faster to congruent pairs (the initial digit in the number with more digits is larger, e.g., 2384 vs. 107) than to incongruent pairs (the initial digit is larger in the number with fewer digits, e.g., 2675 vs. 398). This has been interpreted as support for the processing of multiple attributes in parallel and against serial accounts. The current research asked whether there is a change in the relevance of these attributes as school grades increase. School-age children from the second to sixth grades (N = 206) were presented with pairs of numbers that had either the same number of digits (3 vs. 3 or 4 vs. 4) or a different number of digits (3 vs. 4). In this latter condition, the stimuli, matched by distance, could be either length/digit congruent (e.g., 2384 vs. 107) or length/digit incongruent (e.g., 2675 vs. 398). Linear mixed models showed a length/digit congruity effect from second graders. Interestingly, in the response time measure, congruity interacted with school grade and the side in which the larger number of the pair was presented. Whereas these results support a model that considers number comparison as a process that weighs different attributes in parallel, it is also argued that developmental changes are associated with differences in the level of automatization of the componential skills involved in the comparison., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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7. High-frequency transcranial random noise stimulation enhances unfamiliar face matching of high resolution and pixelated faces.
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Estudillo AJ, Lee YJ, Álvarez-Montesinos JA, and García-Orza J
- Subjects
- Humans, Occipital Lobe, Facial Recognition, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Face identification is useful for social interactions and its impairment can lead to severe social and mental problems. This ability is also remarkably important in applied settings, including eyewitness identification and ID verification. Several studies have demonstrated the potential of Transcranial Random Noise Stimulation (tRNS) to enhance different cognitive skills. However, research has produced inconclusive results about the effectiveness of tRNS to improve face identification. The present study aims to further explore the effect of tRNS on face identification using an unfamiliar face matching task. Observers firstly received either high-frequency bilateral tRNS or sham stimulation for 20 min. The stimulation targeted occipitotemporal areas, which have been previously involved in face processing. In a subsequent stage, observers were asked to perform an unfamiliar face matching task consisting of unaltered and pixelated face pictures. Compared to the sham stimulation group, the high-frequency tRNS group showed better unfamiliar face matching performance with both unaltered and pixelated faces. Our results show that a single high-frequency tRNS session might suffice to improve face identification abilities. These results have important consequences for the treatment of face recognition disorders, and potential applications in those scenarios whereby the identification of faces is primordial., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Crown Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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8. Length is not all that matters: testing the role of number identity and the ratio of fillers in comparisons of multi-digits with different digit length.
- Author
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García-Orza J, Gutiérrez-Cordero I, Larios C, Csilinkó A, and Álvarez-Montesinos JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Reaction Time physiology
- Abstract
Research in multi-digit number comparison usually considers stimuli with the same number of digits (e.g., 3452 vs. 7831). Surprisingly, there is almost no research on the comparison of numbers that differ in length (e.g., 995 vs. 1000), which demands a focus on the number of digits in each multi-digit, despite the fact that the role of number length has been explicitly acknowledged in componential models of multi-digit processing. Our study explores whether the comparison of pairs of natural numbers that differ in length is affected by the identity of the leftmost digit of each multi-digit, and asks what is the effect of having variable proportions of trials with pairs of numbers of the same-length in the task. Across three studies participants compared numbers in blocks with different proportions of same-length multi-digit pairs (Experiment 1 and 2: 25% vs. 50% vs. 75%; Experiment 3: 0% vs. 50%). Stimuli in the different-length condition were length-digit congruent (the number with more digits starting with a larger digit: 2384 vs. 107) or length-digit incongruent (the number with more digits starting with a smaller number: 2675 vs. 398). Response times were shorter in length-digit congruent pairs than in the incongruent pairs. Unexpectedly, this effect was only slightly modulated by the proportion of same-/different-length multi-digit pairs in the experimental set. Despite its perceptual saliency, length is not the only information considered when comparing different-length numbers. The leftmost-digit is also taken into account, with variable relevance here, depending on the characteristics of the stimuli set., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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9. Saying thirteen instead of forty-two but saying lale instead of tale: is number production special?
- Author
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García-Orza J, Gutiérrez-Cordero I, and Guandalini M
- Subjects
- Humans, Language, Linguistics, Phonetics, Semantics, Brain Injuries, Speech
- Abstract
Stimulus Type Effect on Phonological and Semantic errors (STEPS) occurs when a person, following brain damage, produces phonemic errors with non-number words (e.g., lale for tale), but produces semantic errors with number words (e.g., thirteen for forty-two). Despite the relative frequency of this phenomenon, it has received little scholarly attention thus far. To explain STEPS, the Building Blocks hypothesis has been proposed (Cohen, Verstichel, & Dehaene, 1997; Dotan & Friedmann, 2015): the phonological output buffer includes single phonemes as the units of speech production for words, whereas entire number words are the building blocks of multi-digit production. Impairment in the phonological output buffer results in the incorrect selection of these units, leading to phonemic errors when producing non-number words, but semantic errors when producing numbers. In the present study we consider two patients, one with a deficit in the phonological output buffer, and one with a deficit in the phonological input buffer but with a preserved phonological output buffer. Number word and non-number word repetition, naming, and reading abilities were assessed. As expected, STEPS was found in the patient with deficits in the phonological output buffer in the three tasks; more notably, evidence of STEPS was also found for the patient with deficits in the phonological input buffer in the repetition task. Since our results cannot be fully explained by the Building Blocks hypothesis in its present form, we discuss the suitability of this hypothesis for the current data, and consider alternative accounts of STEPS., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None declared., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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10. Nonsymbolic Comparison in Deaf Students: No Evidence for a Deficit in Numerosity Processing.
- Author
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Rodríguez-Santos JM, García-Orza J, Calleja M, Damas J, and Iza M
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- Age Factors, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Child, Child Behavior, Child Language, Cochlear Implantation instrumentation, Cochlear Implants, Cues, Deafness rehabilitation, Disabled Children rehabilitation, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Persons With Hearing Impairments rehabilitation, Deafness psychology, Disabled Children education, Disabled Children psychology, Education of Hearing Disabled methods, Mathematical Concepts, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology
- Abstract
It is commonly found that deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) students experience delayed mathematical achievement. The present study used two nonsymbolic comparison tasks to explore the basic numerical skills of DHH students. Nine prelocutive DHH students with cochlear implants and nine hearing students, matched on nonverbal IQ, visual short-term memory, and verbal comprehension, were recruited. The participants performed two different collection comparison tasks with different ratios and under different perceptual conditions. Analyses by task showed similar response times, accuracy, and ratio effects for both groups on the Low Perceptual Condition task, a finding suggesting that the two groups accessed similar representations of quantity. Differences in performance on the simpler High Perceptual Condition task, on which the DHH group showed slower response times, probably were strategic in origin. The results suggest that DHH students have no deficits in basic numerical skills.
- Published
- 2018
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11. Is place-value processing in four-digit numbers fully automatic? Yes, but not always.
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García-Orza J, Estudillo AJ, Calleja M, and Rodríguez JM
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Mathematical Concepts, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Knowing the place-value of digits in multi-digit numbers allows us to identify, understand and distinguish between numbers with the same digits (e.g., 1492 vs. 1942). Research using the size congruency task has shown that the place-value in a string of three zeros and a non-zero digit (e.g., 0090) is processed automatically. In the present study, we explored whether place-value is also automatically activated when more complex numbers (e.g., 2795) are presented. Twenty-five participants were exposed to pairs of four-digit numbers that differed regarding the position of some digits and their physical size. Participants had to decide which of the two numbers was presented in a larger font size. In the congruent condition, the number shown in a bigger font size was numerically larger. In the incongruent condition, the number shown in a smaller font size was numerically larger. Two types of numbers were employed: numbers composed of three zeros and one non-zero digit (e.g., 0040-0400) and numbers composed of four non-zero digits (e.g., 2795-2759). Results showed larger congruency effects in more distant pairs in both type of numbers. Interestingly, this effect was considerably stronger in the strings composed of zeros. These results indicate that place-value coding is partially automatic, as it depends on the perceptual and numerical properties of the numbers to be processed.
- Published
- 2017
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12. Testing the online reading effects of emotionality on relative clause attachment.
- Author
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García-Orza J, Gavilán JM, Fraga I, and Ferré P
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- Arousal, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Comprehension, Emotions, Language, Reading
- Abstract
Previous research has shown the impact of the emotional dimension of nouns (i.e., valence and arousal) on the completion of relative clauses (RC) that are preceded by a double antecedent [e.g.,: Someone shot the servant (the first noun phrase, NP1) of the actress (the second noun phrase, NP2) who was on the balcony] (Fraga et al. in Q J Exp Psychol 65:1740-1759, 2012). The present study explored for the first time the role of emotional valence, specifically emotional positive nouns, on RC disambiguation in a self-paced reading experiment. Two types of NP1-NP2 relationships were compared: emotional-neutral vs. neutral-emotional. Results showed NP1 preferences in the emotional-neutral condition, whereas no preferences were found in the neutral-emotional condition. We conclude that during reading, the emotional properties of nouns play a role in disambiguation preferences: RC attachment preferences can be neutralized when emotional factors are manipulated. The results are discussed within the framework of current models of sentence processing and with reference to the controversial differences between comprehension and production.
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- 2017
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13. Is VIRTU4L larger than VIR7UAL? Automatic processing of number quantity and lexical representations in leet words.
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García-Orza J, Comesaña M, Piñeiro A, Soares AP, and Perea M
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- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Female, Humans, Judgment, Male, Middle Aged, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Psycholinguistics, Reaction Time, Stroop Test, Young Adult, Mathematical Concepts, Reading
- Abstract
Recent research has shown that leet words (i.e., words in which some of the letters are replaced by visually similar digits; e.g., VIRTU4L) can be processed as their base words without much cost. However, it remains unclear whether the digits inserted in leet words are simply processed as letters or whether they are simultaneously processed as numbers (i.e., in terms of access to their quantity representation). To address this question, we conducted 2 experiments that examined the size congruity effect (i.e., when comparisons of the physical size of numbers are affected by their numerical magnitudes) in a physical-size judgment task. Participants were presented with pairs of leet words that were nominally identical except for the embedded digit (e.g., VIR7UAL-VIRTU4L) and were asked to decide as quickly and accurately as possible which word in the pair appeared in a bigger font. In Experiment 1, we examined the congruity effect (congruent: VIRTU4L-VIR7UAL vs. incongruent: VIR7UAL-VIRTU4L vs. neutral: VIR7UAL-VIR7UAL) and the numerical distance effect (distance 1: PAN3L-P4NEL vs. distance 3: VIRTU4L-VIR7UAL). To examine whether the meaning of these words was accessed, we also manipulated word frequency (i.e., a marker of lexical access) in Experiment 2. Results revealed effects of congruity, distance, and word frequency, thus suggesting automatic access to both number quantity and word representations for leet words. These findings favor multidimensional accounts of number/word recognition. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2016
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14. Quantity processing in deaf and hard of hearing children: evidence from symbolic and nonsymbolic comparison tasks.
- Author
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Rodríguez-Santos JM, Calleja M, García-Orza J, Iza M, and Damas J
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Child, Cognition, Comprehension, Humans, Male, Memory, Photic Stimulation, Reaction Time, Recognition, Psychology, Task Performance and Analysis, Child Development, Deafness psychology, Education of Hearing Disabled methods, Mathematics education, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Symbolism
- Abstract
Deaf children usually achieve lower scores on numerical tasks than normally hearing peers. Explanations for mathematical disabilities in hearing children are based on quantity representation deficits (Geary, 1994) or on deficits in accessing these representations (Rousselle & Noël, 2008). The present study aimed to verify, by means of symbolic (Arabic digits) and nonsymbolic (dot constellations and hands) magnitude comparison tasks, whether deaf children show deficits in representations or in accessing numerical representations. The study participants were 10 prelocutive deaf children and 10 normally hearing children. Numerical distance and magnitude were manipulated. Response time (RT) analysis showed similar magnitude and distance effects in both groups on the 3 tasks. However, slower RTs were observed among the deaf participants on the symbolic task alone. These results suggest that although both groups' quantity representations were similar, the deaf group experienced a delay in accessing representations from symbolic codes.
- Published
- 2014
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15. Electrophysiological signatures of masked transposition priming in a same-different task: evidence with strings of letters vs. pseudoletters.
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Muñoz S, Perea M, García-Orza J, and Barber HA
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- Adult, Electrophysiological Phenomena physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Reaction Time physiology, Young Adult, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Perceptual Masking physiology, Photic Stimulation methods, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Research on masked transposed-letter priming (i.e., jugde-JUDGE triggers a faster response than jupte-JUDGE) has become a key phenomenon to reveal how the brain encodes letter position. Recent behavioural evidence suggests that the mechanism responsible for position coding in a masked priming procedure works with familiar "object" identities (e.g., letters, digits, symbols) but not with unfamiliar object identities (e.g., pseudoletters). Here we used event-related potentials (ERPs) to explore the time course of masked transposition priming of letters vs. pseudoletters in a cue-target same-different matching task. Target stimuli were preceded by a masked prime that could be: (i) identical to the target; (ii) identical to the target except for the transposition of two internal letters/pseudoletters; or (iii) identical to the target except for the substitution of two internal letters/pseudoletters. Only cue-target 'same' trials were analyzed. The priming manipulation affected the "same" trials of the letter strings between 250 ms and 450 ms: identity and transposition conditions produced less negative amplitudes than the substitution condition. Because of the onset latency of this priming effect, we suggest that masked primes affected mainly the cognitive processes related to the categorization of the trials (match versus mismatch), rather than to the initial stages of orthographic processing., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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16. Physical similarity (and not quantity representation) drives perceptual comparison of numbers: evidence from two Indian notations.
- Author
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García-Orza J, Perea M, Abu Mallouh R, and Carreiras M
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Photic Stimulation, Reaction Time, Young Adult, Mathematics, Pattern Recognition, Visual
- Abstract
Numerical quantity seems to affect the response in any task that involves numbers, even in tasks that do not demand access to quantity (e.g., perceptual tasks). That is, readers seem to activate quantity representations upon the mere presentation of integers. One important piece of evidence in favor of this view comes from the finding of a distance effect in perceptual tasks: When one compares two numbers, response times (RTs) are a function of the numerical distance between them. However, recent studies have suggested that the physical similarity between Arabic numbers is strongly correlated with their numerical distance, and that the former could be a better predictor of RT data in perceptual tasks in which magnitude processing is not required (Cohen, 2009a). The present study explored the Persian and Arabic versions of Indian numbers (Exps. 1 and 2, respectively). Naïve participants (speakers of Spanish) and users of these notations (Pakistanis and Jordanians) participated in a physical same-different matching task. The RTs of users of the Indian notations were regressed on perceptual similarity (estimated from the Spanish participants' RTs) and numerical distance. The results showed that, regardless of the degree of correlation between the perceptual similarity function and the numerical distance function, the critical predictor for RTs was perceptual similarity. Thus, participants do not automatically activate Indian integers' quantity representations, at least not when these numbers are presented in simple perceptual tasks.
- Published
- 2012
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17. Emotional nouns affect attachment decisions in sentence completion tasks.
- Author
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Fraga I, Piñeiro A, Acuña-Fariña C, Redondo J, and García-Orza J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Language, Choice Behavior, Emotions, Psycholinguistics, Semantics
- Abstract
We report three sentence completion experiments in which we manipulate the emotional dimension of the nouns in a complex noun phrase (NP) that precedes a relative clause (RC), as in the classic ambiguity in Someone shot the servant of the actress who was on the balcony. The aim was to see whether nouns such as orgy or genocide affect the well-established preference of Spanish to adjoin the relative clause high in the tree (to servant instead of actress in the example above). We manipulated the valence and arousal of the lexical entities residing in the NP. Our results indicate that (a) the inclusion of either pleasant or unpleasant words induces changes in the usual NP1 preference found in Spanish; (b) the effects of high-arousal words are especially clear, in that they pull RC adjunction towards the NP where they are located, be it the NP1 or the NP2; and (c) in the context of sentence production, these kinds of words seem intense enough to promote changes in (and even reverse) a solid syntactic bias. We discuss these findings in the light of existing theories of syntactic ambiguity resolution.
- Published
- 2012
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18. Masked transposition effects for simple versus complex nonalphanumeric objects.
- Author
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García-Orza J, Perea M, and Estudillo A
- Subjects
- Humans, Reaction Time, Attention, Discrimination, Psychological, Orientation, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Perceptual Masking
- Abstract
When two letters/digits/symbols are switched in a string (e.g., jugde-judge; 1492-1942; *?$&-*$?&), the resulting strings are perceptually similar to each other and produce a sizable masked transposition priming effect with the masked priming same-different matching task. However, a parallel effect does not occur for strings of pseudoletters (e.g., [letters in the text]); García-Orza, Perea, & Muñoz, Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 63, 1603-1618, 2010). In the present study, we examined whether masked transposition priming is specific to alphanumeric stimuli or whether it also occurs with strings composed of other "objects"-namely, line drawings of common objects (Experiment 1) and geometrical shapes (Experiment 2). Results showed a significant masked transposition priming effect for geometrical shapes (e.g., [geometrical shapes in the text]), but not for line drawings of common objects (e.g., [symbols in the text]). These findings suggest that the mechanism involved in the coding of position in masked priming works only with perceptually simple, familiar "objects" (i.e., letters, numbers, symbols, or geometrical shapes), once their identities have been well ascertained.
- Published
- 2011
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19. Position coding in two-digit arabic numbers.
- Author
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García-Orza J and Perea M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Reaction Time physiology, Decision Making physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Perceptual Masking physiology
- Abstract
Digit position coding in two-digit Arabic numbers was examined in two masked priming experiments. In Experiment 1, participants had to decide whether the presented stimulus was a two-digit Arabic number (e.g., 67) or not (e.g., G7). Target stimuli could be preceded by a prime which (i) shared one digit in the initial position (e.g., 13-18), (ii) shared one digit but in a different position (83-18), and (iii) was a transposed number (81-18). Two unrelated control conditions, equalized in terms of the distance between primes and targets with the experimental conditions, were also included (e.g., 79-18). Results showed a priming effect only when prime and target shared digits in the same position. Experiment 2 employed a masked priming same-different matching task - a task that has been successfully employed in the literature on letter position coding. Results showed faster response times when prime and target shared digits - including the transposed-digit condition - relative to the control conditions. Thus, the identity of each digit in the early stages of visual processing is not associated with a specific position in two-digit Arabic numbers. We examine the implication of these findings for models of Arabic number processing.
- Published
- 2011
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20. Are transposition effects specific to letters?
- Author
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García-Orza J, Perea M, and Muñoz S
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Humans, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Photic Stimulation methods, Reaction Time physiology, Students, Universities, Attention physiology, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Verbal Behavior, Visual Perception, Vocabulary
- Abstract
Recent research has consistently shown that pseudowords created by transposing two letters are perceptually similar to their corresponding base words (e.g., jugde-judge). In the framework of the overlap model (Gomez, Ratcliff, & Perea, 2008), this effect is due to a noisy process in the localization of the "objects" (e.g., letters, kana syllables). In the present study, we examine whether this effect is specific to letter strings or whether it also occurs with other "objects" (namely, digits, symbols, and pseudoletters). To that end, we conducted a series of five masked priming experiments using the same-different task. Results showed robust effects of transposition for all objects, except for pseudoletters. This is consistent with the view that locations of familiar objects (i.e., letters, numbers, and symbols) can be best understood as distributions along a dimension rather than as precise points.
- Published
- 2010
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21. "2 x 3" primes naming "6": evidence from masked priming.
- Author
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García-Orza J, Damas-López J, Matas A, and Rodríguez JM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Automatism psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Reaction Time, Signal Detection, Psychological, Subliminal Stimulation, Young Adult, Association, Cues, Mathematics, Mental Recall, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Perceptual Masking, Problem Solving
- Abstract
It is a common assumption for multiplication-solving models that single-digit multiplications are automatically retrieved. However, the experimental evidence for this is based on paradigms under suspicion. In this research, we employed a new procedure with the aim of assessing the automatic retrieval of multiplication more directly. In two experiments, multiplication automatism was studied using briefly presented primes (stimulus onset asynchrony = 48 msec) in a number-naming task. In Experiment 1, in the congruent conditions, the target and the prime were the same numbers (e.g., prime, 6; target, 6) or the target was the solution to the multiplication prime (e.g., prime, 2 x 3 = ; target, 6). In the incongruent conditions, no relationship existed between the primes and the targets (e.g., prime, 32; target, 6; or prime, 4 x 8 = ; target, 6). Experiment 2 explored the relevance of the equal sign for the multiplication-priming effect. Data showed that naming was faster when the solution of the multiplication prime matched the target, as compared with the incongruent condition (multiplication-priming effect), and that these effects were found irrespective of the presence of the equal sign. The fact that this priming effect was found even though the participants were unaware of the presentation of the primes supports the automatic character of single-digit multiplication. We conclude by arguing that this procedure is highly valuable for exploring the mechanisms involved in simple arithmetic solving.
- Published
- 2009
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22. Development of the inhibitory component of the executive functions in children and adolescents.
- Author
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Leon-Carrion J, García-Orza J, and Pérez-Santamaría FJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Analysis of Variance, Child, Color Perception, Discrimination Learning, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Reaction Time, Regression Analysis, Attention physiology, Human Development physiology, Inhibition, Psychological, Problem Solving physiology
- Abstract
The development of inhibitory control, one component of the executive functions, during childhood and adolescence was the focus of the present study. A group of 99 participants between 6 and 17 years of age were studied using the Stroop test. Results suggest the existence of age-related differences both in response times and errors that follow a nonlinear relationship. Interference increased in the first age groups, declining from around 10 years till 17 years. Data also suggest that word reading plays an important role in the performance of the task. When reading is blocked, linear relationships between age and interference measures emerge, showing an increase in inhibitory functions during childhood and adolescence.
- Published
- 2004
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23. The role of cued speech in the development of Spanish prepositions.
- Author
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Santana Hernández R, Torres Monreal S, and García Orza J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Spain, Speech Perception, Deafness physiopathology, Language Development, Linguistics, Manual Communication
- Abstract
The aim of the present study was to advance the knowledge of the linguistic development of students with prelingual profound deafness, especially the acquisition and use of prepositions in Spanish, a lexical category with an important role in the verbal comprehension. The researchers sought to learn the level of mastery students with prelingual profound deafness can achieve in the command of prepositions, depending on the system of communication they have been exposed to: classic oralism, Cued Speech, or signed language. The results show that the different systems of communication contribute, to different degrees, to the acquisition of Spanish prepositions, with the best results being obtained with Cued Speech.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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