A behavioral database for masked form priming

被引:0
|
作者
James S. Adelman
Rebecca L. Johnson
Samantha F. McCormick
Meredith McKague
Sachiko Kinoshita
Jeffrey S. Bowers
Jason R. Perry
Stephen J. Lupker
Kenneth I. Forster
Michael J. Cortese
Michele Scaltritti
Andrew J. Aschenbrenner
Jennifer H. Coane
Laurence White
Melvin J. Yap
Chris Davis
Jeesun Kim
Colin J. Davis
机构
[1] University of Warwick,Department of Psychology
[2] Skidmore College,undefined
[3] Royal Holloway,undefined
[4] University of London,undefined
[5] University of Melbourne,undefined
[6] Macquarie University,undefined
[7] University of Bristol,undefined
[8] University of Western Ontario,undefined
[9] University of Arizona,undefined
[10] University of Nebraska,undefined
[11] Washington University,undefined
[12] Colby College,undefined
[13] Plymouth University,undefined
[14] National University of Singapore,undefined
[15] Marcs Institute,undefined
[16] University of Western Sydney,undefined
来源
Behavior Research Methods | 2014年 / 46卷
关键词
Visual word recognition; Lexical decision; Orthographic priming; Megastudies;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Reading involves a process of matching an orthographic input with stored representations in lexical memory. The masked priming paradigm has become a standard tool for investigating this process. Use of existing results from this paradigm can be limited by the precision of the data and the need for cross-experiment comparisons that lack normal experimental controls. Here, we present a single, large, high-precision, multicondition experiment to address these problems. Over 1,000 participants from 14 sites responded to 840 trials involving 28 different types of orthographically related primes (e.g., castfe–CASTLE) in a lexical decision task, as well as completing measures of spelling and vocabulary. The data were indeed highly sensitive to differences between conditions: After correction for multiple comparisons, prime type condition differences of 2.90 ms and above reached significance at the 5% level. This article presents the method of data collection and preliminary findings from these data, which included replications of the most widely agreed-upon differences between prime types, further evidence for systematic individual differences in susceptibility to priming, and new evidence regarding lexical properties associated with a target word’s susceptibility to priming. These analyses will form a basis for the use of these data in quantitative model fitting and evaluation and for future exploration of these data that will inform and motivate new experiments.
引用
收藏
页码:1052 / 1067
页数:15
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