Title of article :
Unconscious auditory information can prime visual word processing: A process-dissociation procedure study
Author/Authors :
Lamy، نويسنده , , Dominique and Mudrik، نويسنده , , Liad and Deouell، نويسنده , , Leon Y.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Whether information perceived without awareness can affect overt performance, and whether such effects can cross sensory modalities, remains a matter of debate. Whereas influence of unconscious visual information on auditory perception has been documented, the reverse influence has not been reported. In addition, previous reports of unconscious cross-modal priming relied on procedures in which contamination of conscious processes could not be ruled out. We present the first report of unconscious cross-modal priming when the unaware prime is auditory and the test stimulus is visual. We used the process-dissociation procedure [Debner, J. A., & Jacoby, L. L. (1994). Unconscious perception: Attention, awareness and control. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 20, 304–317] which allowed us to assess the separate contributions of conscious and unconscious perception of a degraded prime (either seen or heard) to performance on a visual fragment-completion task. Unconscious cross-modal priming (auditory prime, visual fragment) was significant and of a magnitude similar to that of unconscious within-modality priming (visual prime, visual fragment). We conclude that cross-modal integration, at least between visual and auditory information, is more symmetrical than previously shown, and does not require conscious mediation.
Keywords :
Unconscious priming , Cross-modal priming , Process-dissociation procedure , Visual-to-auditory priming
Journal title :
Consciousness and Cognition
Journal title :
Consciousness and Cognition