Title of article
Semantic and subword priming during binocular suppression
Author/Authors
Costello، نويسنده , , Patricia and Jiang، نويسنده , , Yi and Baartman، نويسنده , , Brandon and McGlennen، نويسنده , , Kristine and He، نويسنده , , Sheng، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
8
From page
375
To page
382
Abstract
In general, stimuli that are familiar and recognizable have an advantage of predominance during binocular rivalry. Recent research has demonstrated that familiar and recognizable stimuli such as upright faces and words in a native language could break interocular suppression faster than their matched controls. In this study, a visible word prime was presented binocularly then replaced by a high-contrast dynamic noise pattern presented to one eye and either a semantically related or unrelated word was introduced to the other eye. We measured how long it took for target words to break from suppression. To investigate word-parts priming, a second experiment also included word pairs that had overlapping subword fragments. Results from both experiments consistently show that semantically related words and words that shared subword fragments were faster to gain dominance compared to unrelated words, suggesting that words, even when interocularly suppressed and invisible, can benefit from semantic and subword priming.
Keywords
Awareness , Semantic priming , binocular rivalry , Masking , Interocular suppression , Subword priming
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Record number
2291287
Link To Document