Abstract 
The selective adaptation methodology is used to determine whether auditory word 
recognition is a fully bottom-up autonomous process or a top-down process within 
a more interactive setting. The study investigates the possible impact of lexical 
influences on the observed pattern of phonemic activation. The findings lend support 
for the top-down process theory. They suggest that adaptation happens at a sublexical 
level and interceded by phoneme or phoneme-like representations that arise from 
top-down lexical to phonemic activation. 
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 Maintained by Francis F. Steen, Communication Studies, University of California Los Angeles | |||||||