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Semantic priming in the lexical decision task: Roles of prospective prime-generated expectancies and retrospective semantic matching.
437
Citations
35
References
1989
Year
Semantic PrimingNeurolinguisticsSemantic ProcessingPsycholinguisticsCognitionRetrospective Semantic MatchingLexical Decision TaskLexical SemanticsSemanticsSemantic Priming ParadigmsCorpus LinguisticsSocial SciencesNatural Language ProcessingCognitive LinguisticsWord TargetComputational LinguisticsLanguage StudiesCognitive ScienceDistributional SemanticsLinguisticsSemantic Similarity
In semantic priming paradigms for lexical decisions, the probability that a word target is semantically related to its prime (the relatedness proportion) has been confounded with the probability that a target is a nonword, given that it is unrelated to its prime (the nonword ratio). This study unconfounded these two probabilities in a lexical decision task with category names as primes and with high- and low-dominance exemplars as targets. Semantic priming for high-dominance exemplars was modulated by the relatedness proportion and, to a lesser degree, by the nonword ratio. However, the nonword ratio exerted a stronger influence than did the relatedness proportion on semantic priming for low-dominance exemplars and on the nonword facilitation effect (i.e., the superiority in performance for nonword targets that follow a category name rather than a neutral XXX prime). These results suggest that semantic priming for lexical decisions is affected by both a prospective prime-generated expectancy, modulated by the relatedness proportion, and a retrospective target/prime semantic matching process, modulated by the nonword ratio.
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