Associative priming effects with visible, transposed-letter nonwords: JUGDE facilitates COURT

M Perea, D Palti, P Gomez - Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2012 - Springer
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2012Springer
Associative priming effects can be obtained with masked nonword primes or with masked
pseudohomophone primes (eg, judpe–COURT, tode–FROG), but not with visible primes.
The usual explanation is that when the prime is visible, these stimuli no longer activate the
semantic representations of their base words. Given the important role of transposed-letter
stimuli (eg, jugde) in visual word recognition, here we examined whether or not an
associative priming effect could be obtained with visible transposed-letter nonword primes …
Abstract
Associative priming effects can be obtained with masked nonword primes or with masked pseudohomophone primes (e.g., judpe–COURT, tode–FROG), but not with visible primes. The usual explanation is that when the prime is visible, these stimuli no longer activate the semantic representations of their base words. Given the important role of transposed-letter stimuli (e.g., jugde) in visual word recognition, here we examined whether or not an associative priming effect could be obtained with visible transposed-letter nonword primes (e.g., jugde–COURT) in a series of lexical decision experiments. Results showed a sizable associative priming effect with visible transposed-letter nonword primes (i.e., jugde–COURT faster than neevr–COURT) in Experiments 1–3 that was close to that with word primes. In contrast, we failed to find a parallel effect with replacement-letter nonword primes (Experiment 2). These findings pose some constraints to models of visual word recognition.
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