The subliminal mere exposure effect does not generalize to structurally related stimuli. |
| |
Authors: | Newell, Ben R. Bright, James E. H. |
| |
Abstract: | R. F. Bornstein (1994) questioned whether subliminal mere exposure effects might generalize to structurally related stimuli, thereby providing evidence for the existence of implicit learning. Two experiments examined this claim using letter string stimuli constructed according to the rules of an artificial grammar. Experiment 1 demonstrated that brief, masked exposure to grammatical strings impaired recognition but failed to produce a mere exposure effect on novel structurally related strings seen at test. Experiment 2 replicated this result but also demonstrated that a reliable mere exposure effect could be obtained, provided the same grammatical strings were presented at test. The results suggest that the structural relationship between training and test items prevents the mere exposure effect when participants are unaware of the exposure status of stimuli, and therefore provide no evidence for the existence of implicit learning. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
| |
Keywords: | implicit learning stimulus generalization subliminal stimulation visual perception letter strings artificial grammar novelty string recognition |
|
|