How do Spanish speakers read words? Insights from a crowdsourced lexical decision megastudy
Date
2020Author
Aguasvivas Manzano, José Armando
Carreiras, Manuel
Brysbaert, Marc
Mandera, Paweł
Keuleers, Emmanuel
Duñabeitia, Jon Andoni
Metadata
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Aguasvivas, J., Carreiras, M., Brysbaert, M. et al. How do Spanish speakers read words? Insights from a crowdsourced lexical decision megastudy. Behav Res 52, 1867–1882 (2020). https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-020-01357-9
Abstract
Vocabulary size seems to be affected by multiple factors, including those that belong to the properties of the words themselves
and those that relate to the characteristics of the individuals assessing the words. In this study, we present results from a
crowdsourced lexical decision megastudy in which more than 150,000 native speakers from around 20 Spanish-speaking
countries performed a lexical decision task to 70 target word items selected from a list of about 45,000 Spanish words. We
examined how demographic characteristics such as age, education level, and multilingualism affected participants’ vocabulary
size. Also, we explored how common factors related to words like frequency, length, and orthographic neighbourhood influenced
the knowledge of a particular item. Results indicated important contributions of age to overall vocabulary size, with vocabulary
size increasing in a logarithmic fashion with this factor. Furthermore, a contrast between monolingual and bilingual communities
within Spain revealed no significant vocabulary size differences between the communities. Additionally, we replicated the
standard effects of the words’ properties and their interactions, accurately accounting for the estimated knowledge of a particular
word. These results highlight the value of crowdsourced approaches to uncover effects that are traditionally masked by smallsampled
in-lab factorial experimental designs.