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Are brand names special words? Letter visual‐similarity affects the identification of brand names, but not common words.

Authors :
Perea, Manuel
Baciero, Ana
Labusch, Melanie
Fernández‐López, María
Marcet, Ana
Source :
British Journal of Psychology. Aug2022, Vol. 113 Issue 3, p835-852. 18p. 2 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Brand names are often considered a special type of words of special relevance to examine the role of visual codes during reading: unlike common words, brand names are typically presented with the same letter‐case configuration (e.g., IKEA, adidas). Recently, Pathak et al. (European Journal of Marketing, 2019, 53, 2109) found an effect of visual similarity for misspelled brand names when the participants had to decide whether the brand name was spelled correctly or not (e.g., tacebook [baseword: facebook] was responded more slowly and less accurately than xacebook). This finding is at odds with both orthographically based visual‐word recognition models and prior experiments using misspelled common words (e.g., viotin [baseword: violin] is identified as fast as viocin). To solve this puzzle, we designed two experiments in which the participants had to decide whether the presented item was written correctly. In Experiment 1, following a procedure similar to Pathak et al. (European Journal of Marketing, 2019, 53, 2109), we examined the effect of visual similarity on misspelled brand names with/without graphical information (e.g., anazon vs. atazon [baseword: amazon]). Experiment 2 was parallel to Experiment 1, but we focused on misspelled common words (e.g., anarillo vs. atarillo; baseword: amarillo [yellow in Spanish]). Results showed a sizeable effect of visual similarity on misspelled brand names – regardless of their graphical information, but not on misspelled common words. These findings suggest that visual codes play a greater role when identifying brand names than common words. We examined how models of visual‐word recognition can account for this dissociation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071269
Volume :
113
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
British Journal of Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157935087
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12557