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Pointing the way to new constraints on the dynamical claims of computational models
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Using reaching trajectories to reveal the dynamics of stimulus categorisation
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Effective processing of masked eye gaze requires volitional control
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The Word class effect in the picture-word interference paradigm
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Can the dual-route cascaded computational model of reading offer a valid account of the masked onset priming effect?
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The Word Class Effect in the Picture–word Interference Paradigm
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The word class effect in the picture–word interference paradigm
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Modulating the masked congruence priming effect with the hands and the mouth
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The many places of frequency: Evidence for a novel locus of the lexical frequency effect in word production
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Modulating the Masked Congruence Priming Effect with the Hands and the Mouth
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Abstract:
The authors report a series of experiments in which they use the masked congruence priming paradigm to investigate the processing of masked primes in the manual and verbal response modalities. In the manual response modality, they found that masked incongruent primes produced interference relative to both congruent and neutral primes. This finding, which replicates the standard finding in the masked congruence priming literature, is presumed to reflect the conflict that arises between two incompatible responses and, thus, to index the extent of processing of the masked prime. Somewhat surprisingly, when participants were asked to respond verbally in the same task, masked incongruent primes no longer produced interference, but masked congruent primes produced facilitation. These findings are surprising because they suggest that the processing of nonconsciously perceived primes extends to the response level in the manual, but not verbal, response modality. The authors propose that the modulation of the masked congruence priming effect by response modality is due to verbal, but not manual, responses being mediated by the lexical–phonological production system. ; Psychology ; Version of Record
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Keyword:
lexical access in speech production; masked priming; response modality; response priming; stimulus–response compatibility; visual awareness
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URL: http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:4699592 https://doi.org/10.1037/0096-1523.34.4.894
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The Many Places of Frequency: Evidence for a Novel Locus of the Lexical Frequency Effect in Word Production
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The locus of the frequency effect in picture naming: When recognizing is not enough
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