Search results for "Same different"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Electrophysiological signatures of masked transposition priming in a same-different task: Evidence with strings of letters vs. pseudoletters

2012

Research on masked transposed-letter priming (i.e., jugde-JUDGE triggers a faster response than jupte-JUDGE) has become a key phenomenon to reveal how the brain encodes letter position. Recent behavioural evidence suggests that the mechanism responsible for position coding in a masked priming procedure works with familiar "object" identities (e.g., letters, digits, symbols) but not with unfamiliar object identities (e.g., pseudoletters). Here we used event-related potentials (ERPs) to explore the time course of masked transposition priming of letters vs. pseudoletters in a cue-target same-different matching task. Target stimuli were preceded by a masked prime that could be: (i) identical to…

AdultMalegenetic structuresPerceptual MaskingYoung AdultReaction TimeHumansResponse primingCommunicationbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceSame differentCognitionElectrophysiological PhenomenaElectrophysiologyPattern Recognition VisualCategorizationTime courseFemalePsychologybusinessPerceptual MaskingPriming (psychology)Photic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyNeuroscience Letters
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Corrigendum to “Electrophysiological signatures of masked transposition priming in a same-different task: Evidence with strings of letters vs. pseudo…

2012

wo images were inadvertently left out of the 2nd paragraph of the reviously published article. Please see corrected paragraph and mages below. In a series of behavioural experiments, Garcia-Orza et al. [10] xamined whether masked transposition priming is specific to leter processing. They employed a masked priming same-different atching task in which participants were required to press a utton if cue and target were the same and to press another utton if cue and target were different (see [15,16] for reviews f this task). A briefly presented transposed-letter masked prime as presented immediately before the target stimulus. Garciarza et al. ([10] Experiments 1–4]) found a masked transpositi…

Communicationbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceSpeech recognitionSame differentbusinessPsychologyNeuroscience Letters
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Non-cognate translation priming effects in the same–different task: evidence for the impact of “higher level” information

2015

Norris and colleagues have proposed that priming effects observed in the masked prime same–different task are based solely on pre-lexical orthographic information. This proposal was evaluated by examining translation priming effects from non-cognate translation equivalents using both Spanish–English and Japanese–English bilinguals in the same–different task. Although no priming was observed for Spanish–English bilinguals, who also produced very little translation priming in a lexical decision task, significant priming was observed for Japanese–English bilinguals. These results indicate that, although most of the priming in the same–different task has an orthographic basis, other types of pr…

Response primingLinguistics and Languagebusiness.industryCognitive NeuroscienceSame differentExperimental and Cognitive Psychologycomputer.software_genreLanguage and LinguisticsLexical decision taskCognateArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychologycomputerNatural language processingCognitive psychologyLanguage, Cognition and Neuroscience
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Same–different discrepancy in an exhaustive matching task

1988

In this study, we investigated in a multistimulus matching task the size of the discrepancy between response times for “same” and response times for “different” judgments. Frequently, results have shown that “same” judgments are faster than “different” judgments. Krueger (1984) found inversion in the speed advantage when stimuli were presented simultaneously and concluded that a self-termination factor would explain this result. In the experiment reported here, the subject had to exhaustively scan the whole set of items in the stimulus string. The analysis shows no significant interaction of presentation and response type; that is, the advantage for same stimuli is not reduced for simultane…

Speech recognitionStatisticsResponse typeSame differentGeneral ChemistryStimulus (physiology)behavioral disciplines and activitieshumanitiesCatalysisMathematicsBulletin of the Psychonomic Society
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