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Journal ArticleDOI

Repetition priming and frequency attenuation in lexical access

Kenneth I. Forster, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1984 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 4, pp 680-698
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TLDR
The authors showed that the frequency attenuation effect is a product of the involvement of the episodic memory system in the lexical decision process, which is supported by the demonstration of constant repetition effects for high and low-frequency words when the priming stimulus is masked; the masking is assumed to minimize the influence of any possible episodic trace of the prime.
Abstract
Repetition priming effects in lexical decision tasks are stronger for low-frequency words than for high-frequency words. This frequency attenuation effect creates problems for frequency-ordered search models that assume a relatively stable frequency effect. The suggestion is made that frequency attenuation is a product of the involvement of the episodic memory system in the lexical decision process. This hypothesis is supported by the demonstration of constant repetition effects for high- and low-frequency words when the priming stimulus is masked; the masking is assumed to minimize the influence of any possible episodic trace of the prime. It is further shown that long-term repetition effects are much less reliable when the subject is not required to make a lexical decision response to the prime. When a response is required, the expected frequency attenuation effect is restored. It is concluded that normal repetition effects consist of two components: a very brief lexical effect that is independent of frequency and a long-term episodic effect that is sensitive to frequency. There has been much recent interest in the fact that in a lexical decision experiment, where subjects are required to classify letter strings as words or nonwords, there is a substantial increase in both the speed and the accuracy of classificatio n for words that are presented more than once during the experiment, even though considerable time may have elapsed between successive presen

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The density constraint on form-priming in the naming task: interference effects from a masked prime

TL;DR: The authors showed that strong facilitatory effects of form similarity are readily obtained when the prime is heavily masked and cannot be reported, and that this effect is subject to a special density constraint, namely, that form-priming only occurs for words that have few orthographic neighbors and hence are located in low-density regions of the lexicon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frequency drives lexical access in reading but not in speaking: the frequency-lag hypothesis.

TL;DR: The results challenge existing accounts of bilingual disadvantages and reveal fundamentally different processes during lexical access across modalities, entailing a primarily semantically driven search in production but a frequency-driven search in comprehension.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of the Posterior Fusiform Gyrus in Reading

TL;DR: These findings conflict with the notion of stored visual word forms and instead suggest that this region acts as an interface between visual form information and higher order stimulus properties such as its associated sound and meaning when processing any meaningful visual stimulus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relations among regular and irregular morphologically related words in the lexicon as revealed by repetition priming.

TL;DR: Interpretations that repetition priming reflects either repeated access to a common lexical entry or associative semantic priming are both rejected in favor of a lexical organization in which components of a word may be shared among distinct words without the words themselves, in any sense, sharing a “lexical entry.”
Journal ArticleDOI

Orthographic processing in visual word identification.

TL;DR: An account of orthographic processing is outlined which attributes priming to cooperative interactions between coarse relative-position coded letter cluster representations activated by primes and targets.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Encoding specificity and retrieval processes in episodic memory.

TL;DR: This paper describes and evaluates explanations offered by these theories to account for the effect of extralist cuing, facilitation of recall of list items by nonlist items.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the relationship between autobiographical memory and perceptual learning.

TL;DR: The experiments that are reported were designed to explore the relationship between the more aware autobiographical form of memory that is measured by a recognition memory test and the less aware form ofMemory that is expressed in perceptual learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

The language-as-fixed-effect fallacy: A critique of language statistics in psychological research.

TL;DR: The authors showed that the language-as-fixed-effect fallacy can be avoided by doing the right statistics, selecting the appropriate design, and sampling by systematic procedures, or by proceeding according to the so-called method of single cases.
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