Difference between revisions of "Crossmodal semantic priming"

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(from Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics)
 
 
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When the first word is presented auditorily, and the second word is presented visually, the task is '''crossmodal'''. '''Semantic [[priming]]'' is an effect that explained with the following example.  
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When the first word is presented auditorily, and the second word is presented visually, the task is '''crossmodal'''. '''Semantic [[priming]]''' is an effect that explained with the following example.  
  
 
===Example===
 
===Example===

Latest revision as of 15:44, 22 May 2008

When the first word is presented auditorily, and the second word is presented visually, the task is crossmodal. Semantic priming is an effect that explained with the following example.

Example

When subjects are asked to name or to make a lexical decision on a visually presented word (e.g. cat), they react faster when they have just been presented with a semantically or associatively related word (e.g. dog) than when there is no semantic or associative relation between the two words (e.g. map).

Link

Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics