You can't Stroop a lexical decision: Is semantic processing fundamentally facilitative?

Category

Journal Article

Authors

Schmidt, J.R., Cheesman, J., Besner, D.

Year

2013

Title

You can't Stroop a lexical decision: Is semantic processing fundamentally facilitative?

Journal / book / conference

Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology

Abstract

It is well documented that related prime words facilitate target processing in lexical decision (e. g., doctor facilitates nurse), but interfere with target processing in the Stroop task (e. g., the word blue slows the time to name the colour red). Five experiments explored several potential explanations for these differences. In Experiments 1 and 2, all stimuli were novel (as in a typical lexical decision design). Participants were faster both to make lexical decisions and to read colour words aloud that were primed by incongruent associates (e. g., banana) relative to a neutral prime (e. g., knot). Experiments 3 and 4 used a small set of repeatedly presented stimuli (as in a typical Stroop design). Incongruent colour words facilitated lexical decisions to target colour words, but interfered with identification (reading aloud). Experiment 5 further showed that interference is still observed in identification when the distractor set size is large but the target/response set size is small. These findings suggest that semantic connections are solely facilitative and that response competition only occurs when there is a small set of repeated responses and identification (rather than lexical decision) is required. The more general problem of research fragmentation is briefly discussed

Issue

2

Volume

67

Pages

130-139

Keywords

association|COLOR|CONTEXT|FACILITATION|IDENTIFICATION|INHIBITION|INTERFERENCE|lexical decision|MODEL|READING ALOUD|RESPONSES|RETRIEVAL|SET|SET SIZE|SPREADING ACTIVATION|STIMULI|STIMULUS-STIMULUS|Stroop|STROOP TASK|target processing|TASK|task differences|TIME|VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION

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