THE PROCESSING OF NONTARGET WORDS - SEMANTIC OR NOT

被引:47
|
作者
BROADBENT, DE
GATHERCOLE, SE
机构
关键词
D O I
10.1080/14640749008401206
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
It is known that people reacting to visual words may be affected by the meaning of accompanying non-target words. On the approach to perception developed by Treisman (e.g. 1986), this is surprising, because meaning might be thought to require analysis of conjunctions of physical features and so should remain uncomputed for non-target words. Treisman’s approach does, however, assert that analysis of the target may unleash further processes that would prime the system for detection of related words. If this were so, then presentation of the target earlier than the distractors would increase the effect of the latter; whereas if analysis of non-targets were independent of priming, they might be expected to have a smaller effect when delayed. Further, if the sets of words involved are small and familiar, then individual features of primed non-targets, rather than conjunctions of features, might trigger interference. They might especially do so when spatial separation of target and non-target is small. Five experiments using a paradigm developed by Shaffer and LaBerge confirm that the meaning of non-target words affects response to targets; but (1) this is more true for early than for late arrival of the target; (2) it is affected by target/non-target separation in space; (3) it is true for familiar sets of repeated words but not, in these data, for words used once only in the experiment. It is therefore concluded that the results are more consistent with a Treisman type of explanation than with a theory of universal and automatic full analysis. © 1990, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 37
页数:35
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Semantic and phonological influences on the processing of words and pseudohomophones
    Mark Yates
    Lawrence Locker
    Greg B. Simpson
    Memory & Cognition, 2003, 31 : 856 - 866
  • [12] Grasping the invisible: Semantic processing of abstract words
    Lenka Zdrazilova
    Penny M. Pexman
    Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 2013, 20 : 1312 - 1318
  • [13] Semantic and phonological influences on the processing of words and pseudohomophones
    Yates, M
    Locker, L
    Simpson, GB
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2003, 31 (06) : 856 - 866
  • [14] Unconscious semantic processing of polysemous words is not automatic
    Rohaut, Benjamin
    Alario, F. -Xavier
    Meadow, Jacqueline
    Cohen, Laurent
    Naccache, Lionel
    NEUROSCIENCE OF CONSCIOUSNESS, 2016, (01)
  • [15] SEMANTIC RELATEDNESS AND THE PROCESSING OF UPCOMING WORDS IN SENTENCES
    SCHWANENFLUGEL, PJ
    BULLETIN OF THE PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY, 1987, 25 (05) : 337 - 337
  • [16] Grasping the invisible: Semantic processing of abstract words
    Zdrazilova, Lenka
    Pexman, Penny M.
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2013, 20 (06) : 1312 - 1318
  • [17] Semantic processing of previews within compound words
    White, Sarah J.
    Bertram, Raymond
    Hyona, Jukka
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2008, 34 (04) : 988 - 993
  • [18] Semantic processing of emotional words in depression and schizophrenia
    Klumpp, Heide
    Keller, Jennifer
    Miller, Gregory A.
    Casas, Brooks R.
    Best, Jennifer L.
    Deldin, Patricia J.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2010, 75 (02) : 211 - 215
  • [19] EFFECTS OF LEVELS-OF-PROCESSING ON RETENTION OF TARGET AND NONTARGET WORDS IN A SELECTIVE ATTENTION TASK
    TSUZUKI, T
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1986, 56 (06): : 328 - 334
  • [20] Actions, Words, and Numbers: A Motor Contribution to Semantic Processing?
    Andres, Michael
    Olivier, Etienne
    Badets, Arnaud
    CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2008, 17 (05) : 313 - 317