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A New Demonstration of the Illusory Letters Phenomenon: Graphemic Restoration in Arabic Word Perception

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posted on 2016-01-18, 15:20 authored by Timothy R. Jordan, Mercedes Sheen, Maryam A. AlJassmi, Kevin B. Paterson
The illusory letters phenomenon (ILP) is a unique demonstration that words can be perceived as complete even when letters are physically absent. However, the ILP has only ever been reported for a Latinate language (English), and it is unknown whether the illusion occurs for alphabetic languages with fundamentally different visual properties. Here we report a demonstration of the ILP for Arabic in which stimuli containing only the exterior letters of three-letter Arabic words and a nonsense pattern in the interior position were presented to fluent Arabic readers. Despite being incomplete, participants perceived these stimuli as complete Arabic words with all letters visible in their appropriate positions, and were unable to distinguish between illusory and normal displays. This finding provides an important extension of the original ILP and suggests that alphabetic languages may be widely susceptible to the phenomenon and reading generally may occur as a process augmented by illusory percepts.

History

Citation

Perception, 2015, 44 (2), pp. 215-218

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Perception

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

0301-0066

eissn

1468-4233

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2016-01-18

Publisher version

http://pec.sagepub.com/content/44/2/215

Language

en

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