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Original Articles

Cascading activation from lexical processing to letter-level processing in written word production

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Pages 606-621 | Received 06 Feb 2013, Accepted 31 Jul 2014, Published online: 28 Aug 2014
 

Abstract

Descriptions of language production have identified processes involved in producing language and the presence and type of interaction among those processes. In the case of spoken language production, consensus has emerged that there is interaction among lexical selection processes and phoneme-level processing. This issue has received less attention in written language production. In this paper, we present a novel analysis of the writing-to-dictation performance of an individual with acquired dysgraphia revealing cascading activation from lexical processing to letter-level processing. The individual produced frequent lexical–semantic errors (e.g., chipmunk → SQUIRREL) as well as letter errors (e.g., inhibit → INBHITI) and had a profile consistent with impairment affecting both lexical processing and letter-level processing. The presence of cascading activation is suggested by lower letter accuracy on words that are more weakly activated during lexical selection than on those that are more strongly activated. We operationalize weakly activated lexemes as those lexemes that are produced as lexical–semantic errors (e.g., lethal in deadly → LETAHL) compared to strongly activated lexemes where the intended target word (e.g., lethal) is the lexeme selected for production.

The authors gratefully acknowledge R.M.I. for his hard work and dedication to our extensive testing. Portions of this work were presented at the Academy of Aphasia in 2011 (Montreal, Canada). We also thank Kristina Kmieciak, Tori Miner, Alexandra Muratore, Tiffany Chang, and Daniela Velez for help with testing and data analysis throughout this project.

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