Revisiting bias effects in word-initial phonological priming. |
| |
Authors: | Pitt, Mark A. Shoaf, Lisa |
| |
Abstract: | The phonological priming paradigm, in which participants respond to the second of 2 consecutively presented spoken words, has the potential to be a useful tool with which to study lexical processing. Concerns about response biases distorting the results have persisted since its introduction. This study explored the manifestation of biases by modifying the standard priming experiment such that the magnitude of priming effects using the same items could be compared at different points during the testing session. Four experiments investigated whether a recent dissociation of response biases and priming effects is evidence of lexical inhibition when the prime and target overlap by the first 3 word-initial phonemes (M. Hamburger & L. A Slowiaczek, 1996). Biases were found in conditions previously thought to prevent their influence. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
| |
Keywords: | phonological priming response biases priming effects lexical inhibition lexical processing priming paradigm bias effect |
|
|