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Original Article

Age of acquisition and imageability: a cross‐task comparison

Danielle M. Ploetz

University of South Alabama, , Mobile, AL, USA

Part of the work presented here is based on D. Ploetz's master's thesis.Search for more papers by this author
Mark Yates

Corresponding Author

University of South Alabama, , Mobile, AL, USA

Addressed for correspondence: Mark Yates, Department of Psychology, University of South Alabama, 75 S. University Blvd., Mobile, AL 36688, USA. E‐mail:

myates@southalabama.edu

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First published: 14 November 2014

Abstract

Previous research has reported an imageability effect on visual word recognition. Words that are high in imageability are recognised more rapidly than are those lower in imageability. However, later researchers argued that imageability was confounded with age of acquisition. In the current research, these two factors were manipulated in a factorial design to assess their effect in a lexical decision task and a progressive demasking task. Across both tasks, there was a clear and robust effect of age of acquisition. In contrast, the imageability effect was only evident in the progressive demasking task. Both effects are explained within the connectionist framework in terms of network plasticity and semantic feedback activation.