| Literature DB >> 24488815 |
James S Adelman1, Rebecca L Johnson, Samantha F McCormick, Meredith McKague, Sachiko Kinoshita, Jeffrey S Bowers, Jason R Perry, Stephen J Lupker, Kenneth I Forster, Michael J Cortese, Michele Scaltritti, Andrew J Aschenbrenner, Jennifer H Coane, Laurence White, Melvin J Yap, Chris Davis, Jeesun Kim, Colin J Davis.
Abstract
Reading involves a process of matching an orthographic input with stored representations in lexical memory. The masked priming paradigm has become a standard tool for investigating this process. Use of existing results from this paradigm can be limited by the precision of the data and the need for cross-experiment comparisons that lack normal experimental controls. Here, we present a single, large, high-precision, multicondition experiment to address these problems. Over 1,000 participants from 14 sites responded to 840 trials involving 28 different types of orthographically related primes (e.g., castfe-CASTLE) in a lexical decision task, as well as completing measures of spelling and vocabulary. The data were indeed highly sensitive to differences between conditions: After correction for multiple comparisons, prime type condition differences of 2.90 ms and above reached significance at the 5% level. This article presents the method of data collection and preliminary findings from these data, which included replications of the most widely agreed-upon differences between prime types, further evidence for systematic individual differences in susceptibility to priming, and new evidence regarding lexical properties associated with a target word's susceptibility to priming. These analyses will form a basis for the use of these data in quantitative model fitting and evaluation and for future exploration of these data that will inform and motivate new experiments.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24488815 DOI: 10.3758/s13428-013-0442-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Res Methods ISSN: 1554-351X