Publication:

Verbal working memory and linguistic long-term memory: Exploring the lexical cohort effect

Date

Date

Date
2019
Journal Article
Published version

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Kowialiewski, B., & Majerus, S. (2019). Verbal working memory and linguistic long-term memory: Exploring the lexical cohort effect. Memory & Cognition, 47, 997–1011. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-019-00898-5

Abstract

Abstract

Abstract

Numerous studies have shown that verbal working memory (vWM) performance is strongly influenced by linguistic knowledge, with items more familiar at sublexical, lexical, and/or semantic levels leading to higher vWM recall performance. Among the many different psycholinguistic variables whose impact on vWM has been studied, the lexical cohort effect is one of the few effects that has not yet been explored. The lexical cohort effect reflects the fact that words sharing their first phonemes with many other words (e.g. alcove, alligator,

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61 since deposited on 2022-04-12
60last week
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

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Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Volume

Volume

Volume
47

Number

Number

Number
5

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number
997

Page end

Page end

Page end
1011

Item Type

Item Type

Item Type
Journal Article

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Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Language

Language

Language
English

Publication date

Publication date

Publication date
2019

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Date available

Date available
2022-04-12

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Publisher

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ISSN or e-ISSN
0090-502X

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OA Status

OA Status
Closed

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PubMed ID

PubMed ID

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61 since deposited on 2022-04-12
60last week
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

Citations

Citation copied

Kowialiewski, B., & Majerus, S. (2019). Verbal working memory and linguistic long-term memory: Exploring the lexical cohort effect. Memory & Cognition, 47, 997–1011. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-019-00898-5

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