Abstract
D. W. Massaro and G. C. Oden (1995) claimed that M. A. Pitt's (1995) data provide strong evidence in favor of independence, not interactivity, as argued by Pitt. Massaro and Oden's arguments rested on an evaluation of the fit of the fuzzy logical model of perception (FLMP) to the identification data and on criticisms of the detection theory analyses. In this reply, Pitt shows that the latter criticisms were unfounded and that the data-fitting demonstrations raised questions about FLMP's ability to capture the phenomenon of interest (i.e., lexical context effects).
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More From: Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition
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