Title of article
Mixing costs and mixing benefits in naming words, pictures, and sums
Author/Authors
Lupker، Stephen J. نويسنده , , Kinoshita، Sachiko نويسنده , , Coltheart، Max نويسنده , , Taylor، Tamsen E. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-555
From page
556
To page
0
Abstract
When two types of stimuli are mixed in a trial block, each stimulus type is typically responded to more slowly than when those stimuli are presented by themselves in pure blocks (a "mixing cost," Los, 1996). In word/non-word naming tasks, however, mixing two types of stimuli leads to a different, "homogenization," pattern. There is a mixing cost for the easier stimuli and a mixing benefit for the more difficult stimuli (Lupker,Brown,& Colombo, 1997). In the present research we investigated the generality of this homogenization pattern by examining picture naming and a sum-naming task involving addition problems (e.g., 10+7=?). In Experiments 1 and 2, the homogenization pattern was observed for both pictures and sums. In Experiments 3 and 4, qualitatively different stimulus types (words and pictures, words and sums) were mixed. The mixing cost pattern was observed. Experiments 5 (words and pictures) and 6 (words and sums), however, demonstrated that a homogenization-type pattern can be obtained even when qualitatively different stimulus types are mixed. These results indicate that theoretical mechanisms like those proposed by Los (1996) and theoretical mechanisms like those proposed by Lupker et al. (1997) are both active in reaction time experiments.
Keywords
Time criterion , Homogenization pattern , Mixing cost pattern , Pure vs. mixed blocks , Naming task
Journal title
Journal of Memory and Language
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Memory and Language
Record number
65784
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