Journal article
Brand name confusion: Subjective and objective measures of orthographic similarity
JS Burt, KA McFarlane, SJ Kelly, MS Humphreys, K Weatherall, RG Burrell
Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied | AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1037/xap0000127
Abstract
Determining brand name similarity is vital in areas of trademark registration and brand confusion. Students rated the orthographic (spelling) similarity of word pairs (Experiments 1, 2, and 4) and brand name pairs (Experiment 5). Similarity ratings were consistently higher when words shared beginnings rather than endings, whereas shared pronunciation of the stressed vowel had small and less consistent effects on ratings. In Experiment 3 a behavioral task confirmed the similarity of shared beginnings in lexical processing. Specifically, in a task requiring participants to decide whether 2 words presented in the clear (a probe and a later target) were the same or different, a masked prime word..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The research was supported by Linkage Grant LP120100249 from the Australian Research Council. We thank Philippe Lacherez for assistance with modeling and Walter Leggett for assistance with item preparation.