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1.
Conscious Cogn ; 17(1): 64-71, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17407823

ABSTRACT

Two experiments examined false recall for lists of semantically and phonologically associated words as a function of presentation duration. Veridical recall increased with long exposure durations for all lists. For semantically associated lists, false recall increased from 20-250 ms, then decreased. There was a high level of false recall with 20 ms durations for phonologically associated lists (47 and 44% for Experiments 1 and 2, respectively), which declined as duration increased. In Experiment 2, for lists presented at 20 and 50 ms rates, false recall given zero correct recall was observed frequently, suggesting that conscious recollection of studied words was not necessary for phonological false memory. Differences between phonologically and semantically associated lists were consistent with a feature integration model based on automatic initial processing of phonetic features of words.


Subject(s)
Association , Mental Recall , Analysis of Variance , Humans , Nevada , Phonetics , Psycholinguistics , Semantics , Time Factors
2.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform ; 31(3): 420-37, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15982123

ABSTRACT

Viewing a distorted face induces large aftereffects in the appearance of an undistorted face. The authors examined the processes underlying this adaptation by comparing how selective the aftereffects are for different dimensions of the images including size, spatial frequency content, contrast, and color. Face aftereffects had weaker selectivity for changes in the size, contrast, or color of the images and stronger selectivity for changes in contrast polarity or spatial frequency. This pattern could arise if the adaptation is contingent on the perceived similarity of the stimuli as faces. Consistent with this, changing contrast polarity or spatial frequency had larger effects on the perceived identity of a face, and aftereffects were also selective for different individual faces. These results suggest that part of the sensitivity changes underlying the adaptation may arise at visual levels closely associated with the representation of faces.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Face , Figural Aftereffect , Perceptual Distortion , Analysis of Variance , Color Perception , Humans , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Recognition, Psychology
3.
Memory ; 12(2): 129-39, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15250178

ABSTRACT

False recognition of new test words is higher for experimental lures (e.g., universal) with initial phonemes identical to studied words (e.g., university) than for control lures. A proposed mechanism to explain this phenomenon involves implicit activation of potential solution words during the brief period of uncertainty immediately following onset of a spoken study word. Two experiments examined whether the presumed pre-recognition processing during the stimulus discovery phase of spoken word identification increased familiarity of a studied word, thereby increasing correct recognitions and estimates of presentation frequency. Critical test words were presented a single time during study in Experiment 1, and their phonologically related words were presented one, two, or three times. Correct recognition and frequency estimates of targets were enhanced by multiple presentations of associates sharing initial phonemes. Experiment 2 provided a replication with five repetitions of phonological associates during study and two study presentations of critical test words. The results of these two experiments confirmed a necessary theoretical consequence of the implicit activation mechanism that has been invoked to explain the effects of phonological similarity on false recognition.


Subject(s)
Mental Recall , Recognition, Psychology , Repression, Psychology , Speech Perception , Adult , Humans , Models, Psychological , Phonetics , Semantics
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