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Visual similarity effects on masked priming.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Kinoshita, Sachiko 
Robidoux, Serje 
Mills, Luke 

Abstract

We investigated the role of the visual similarity of masked primes to targets in a lexical decision experiment. In the primes, some letters in the target (e.g., A in ABANDON) had either visually similar letters (e.g., H), dissimilar letters (D), visually similar digits (4), or dissimilar digits (6) substituted for them. The similarities of the digits and letters to the base letter were equated and verified in a two-alternative forced choice (2AFC) perceptual identification task. Using targets presented in lowercase (e.g., abandon) and primes presented in uppercase, visually similar digit primes (e.g., 484NDON) produced more priming than did visually dissimilar digit primes (676NDON), but little difference was found between the visually similar and dissimilar letter primes (HRHNDON vs. DWDNDON). These results were explained in terms of task-driven competition between the target letter and the visually similar letter.

Description

Keywords

Adult, Humans, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Psychomotor Performance, Recognition, Psychology, Repetition Priming, Young Adult

Journal Title

Mem Cognit

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0090-502X
1532-5946

Volume Title

42

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC