Search results for "Repetition priming"

showing 4 items of 24 documents

Repetition priming: Is music special?

2005

Using short and long contexts, the present study investigated musical priming effects that are based on chord repetition and harmonic relatedness. A musical target (a chord) was preceded by either an identical prime or a different but harmonically related prime. In contrast to words, pictures, and environmental sounds, chord processing was not facilitated by repetition. Experiments 1 and 2 using single-chord primes showed either no significant difference between chord repetition and harmonic relatedness or facilitated processing for harmonically related targets. Experiment 3 using longer prime contexts showed that musical priming depended more on the musical function of the target in the p…

Sound Spectrographymedia_common.quotation_subjectRepetition primingPilot Projects050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyMusical050105 experimental psychologyPitch DiscriminationPerceptionReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral Psychologymedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesSignificant differenceEnvironmental soundsAssociation LearningCognitionMemory Short-TermAuditory PerceptionChord (music)CuesPsychologybusinessPriming (psychology)MusicPsychoacousticsCognitive psychologyThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A
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2015

Previewing distracters enhances the efficiency of visual search. Watson and Humphreys (1997) proposed that the preview benefit rests on visual marking, a mechanism which actively encodes distracter locations at preview and inhibits them afterwards at search. As Watson and Humphreys did, we used a letter-color search task to study constraints of visual marking in conjunction search and near-efficient single-feature search with single-colored and homogeneous distracter letters. Search performance was measured for fixed target and distracter features (block design) and for randomly changed features across trials (random design). In single-feature search there was a full preview benefit for bot…

Visual searchCommunicationVisual perceptionColor visionbusiness.industrySpeech recognitionRepetition primingSensory SystemsTask (project management)Conjunction (grammar)OphthalmologyFeature (computer vision)businessPsychologyBlock (data storage)Journal of Vision
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Masked priming effects are modulated by expertise in the script.

2010

In a recent study using a masked priming same–different matching task, García-Orza, Perea, and Muñoz (2010) found a transposition priming effect for letter strings, digit strings, and symbol strings, but not for strings of pseudoletters (i.e., [Formula: see text] produced similar response times to the control pair [Formula: see text]). They argued that the mechanism responsible for position coding in masked priming is not operative with those “objects” whose identity cannot be attained rapidly. To assess this hypothesis, Experiment 1 examined masked priming effects in Arabic for native speakers of Arabic, whereas participants in Experiments 2 and 3 were lower intermediate learners of Arabi…

VocabularyUniversitiesPhysiologyArabicmedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingRepetition primingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyVocabularyJudgmentProfessional CompetencePhysiology (medical)Reaction TimeHumansStudentsArabic scriptGeneral Psychologymedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceCognitionGeneral MedicineProfessional competencelanguage.human_languageLinguisticsNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualWord recognitionlanguagePsychologyPriming (psychology)Perceptual MaskingPhotic StimulationQuarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006)
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Further evidence that the effects of repetition on subjective time depend on repetition probability

2017

Repeated stimuli typically have shorter apparent duration than novel stimuli. Most explanations for this effect have attributed it to the repeated stimuli being more expected or predictable than the novel items, but an emerging body of work suggests that repetition and expectation exert distinct effects on time perception. The present experiment replicated a recent study in which the probability of repetition was varied between blocks of trials. As in the previous work, the repetition effect was smaller when repeats were common (and therefore more expected) than when they were rare. These results add to growing evidence that, contrary to traditional accounts, expectation increases apparent …

media_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990Repetition primingStimulus (physiology)perception050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesSubjective time0302 clinical medicinePerceptionPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencestime perceptionpredictive codingGeneral Psychologymedia_commonOriginal ResearchPredictive coding05 social sciencesTime perceptionlcsh:Psychologyrepetition suppressionPsychologySocial psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryexpectationCognitive psychology
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