Abstract
The present experiment obtained Stroop and reverse Stroop effects in a card-sorting task where subjects were required to sort cards into bins, labeled with either color patches or color names in black ink, under silent and concurrent articulation conditions. Performance by normal subjects and a conduction aphasic supported the notion that concurrent articulation affects post-lexical phonology. It was shown that the status of the hypothesis the pre-lexical phonology is normally used to access meaning during reading (the speech recoding hypothesis) remained uncertain if concurrent articulation only affected post-lexical phonology.

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