Title of article
Categorical priming of famous person recognition: A hitherto overlooked methodological factor can resolve a long-standing debate
Author/Authors
Stone، نويسنده , , Anna، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
7
From page
874
To page
880
Abstract
The Burton, Bruce and Johnston [Burton, A. M., Bruce, V., & Johnston, R. A. (1990). Understanding face recognition with an interactive activation model. British Journal of Psychology, 81, 361–380] model of person recognition proposes that representations of known persons are connected by shared semantic attributes. This predicts that priming should be observed between persons from the same category, e.g. famous persons with the same occupation. Empirical investigations to date have produced mixed results, and comparison of methods suggests that priming based on shared occupation may have been suppressed by the presence of prime-target pairs representing a stronger relationship of close association. In the present experiment, 72 participants performed a familiarity decision to famous names preceded by close associates or members of the same occupational category. As predicted, categorical priming was observed in the group of participants for whom the same occupation prime-target pairs were presented before the close-associate pairs, but not in the group for whom the two types of relationship were intermixed. Associate priming was significant in both groups. These results are attributed to differing levels of processing of the primes, invoked by participants’ observation of the most salient prime-target relationship.
Keywords
List context , Semantic priming , Categories , Person recognition
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2076355
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