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Gordon, Peter C.; Plummer, Patrick; Choi, Wonil – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
Serial attention models of eye-movement control during reading were evaluated in an eye-tracking experiment that examined how lexical activation combines with visual information in the parafovea to affect word skipping (where a word is not fixated during first-pass reading). Lexical activation was manipulated by repetition priming created through…
Descriptors: Human Body, Priming, Word Recognition, Eye Movements
Kihara, Ken; Yagi, Yoshihiko; Takeda, Yuji; Kawahara, Jun I. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
When two targets (T1 and T2) are embedded in rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP), T2 is often missed (attentional blink, AB) if T2 follows T1 by less than 500 ms. Some have proposed that inhibition of a distractor following T1 contributes to the AB, but no direct evidence supports this proposal. This study examined distractor inhibition by…
Descriptors: Evidence, Inhibition, Eye Movements, Visual Stimuli
Spataro, Pietro; Mulligan, Neil W.; Rossi-Arnaud, Clelia – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
Distraction during encoding has long been known to disrupt later memory performance. Contrary to this long-standing result, we show that detecting an infrequent target in a dual-task paradigm actually improves memory encoding for a concurrently presented word, above and beyond the performance reached in the full-attention condition. This absolute…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Cognitive Processes, Memory, Attention
Harris, Irina M.; Benito, Claire T.; Dux, Paul E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
We investigated distractor processing in a dual-target rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) task containing familiar objects, by measuring repetition priming from a priming distractor (PD) to Target 2 (T2). Priming from a visually identical PD was contrasted with priming from a PD in a different orientation from T2. We also tested the effect of…
Descriptors: Priming, Language Processing, Infants, Investigations
Leboe, Jason P.; Leboe, Launa C.; Milliken, Bruce – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
According to a transfer-appropriate processing framework, immediate priming costs arise from a match between a prime and probe event on 1 dimension and a difference between those 2 events on some other dimension (i.e., a partial match). In Experiment 1, the authors used a Stroop priming procedure to generate 6 variants of partial match, yet only 1…
Descriptors: Attention, Costs, Priming, Observation
Chao, Hsuan-Fu – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
Single-prime negative priming refers to the phenomenon wherein repetition of a prime as the probe target results in delayed response. Sometimes this effect has been found to be contingent on participants' unawareness of the primes, and sometimes it has not. Further, sometimes this effect has been found to be eliminated when the prime could predict…
Descriptors: Experiments, Repetition, Time Factors (Learning), Priming