How word comprehension exposures facilitate later spoken production: implications for lexical processing and repetition priming.

Repetition priming transfer-appropriate processing word comprehension word frequency word production

Journal

Memory (Hove, England)
ISSN: 1464-0686
Titre abrégé: Memory
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9306862

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 19 11 2020
medline: 31 8 2021
entrez: 18 11 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Both comprehension and production exposures to words facilitate spoken production of the same words in picture-naming tasks performed several minutes later. Three experiments examined the mechanisms by which different types of comprehension exposures to words facilitate spoken production. Both overt and silent reading and listening tasks elicited substantial priming in picture naming at 10-minute but not 1-week retention intervals. Relative to silent conditions, encoding conditions that involved speaking the target word overtly elicited stronger priming effects in both RT and accuracy and larger frequency effects in RT. Frequency effects were not reliable in accuracy priming or silent-encoding RT priming. Articulatory suppression did not diminish priming effects relative to silent reading/listening, and priming effects did not depend on whether presentations at encoding were visual or auditory. Together, the results indicate that a common modality-general lemma representation is accessed in comprehension and production, that both lemma and phonological retrieval contribute to repetition priming in production, and that phonological retrieval is sensitive to word frequency. These results are consistent with a theory based on transfer-appropriate processing if word comprehension elicits top-down processing or feedback from the concept to the lemma.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33203304
doi: 10.1080/09658211.2020.1845740
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

39-58

Subventions

Organisme : National Science Foundation
ID : BCS-1632283

Auteurs

Naoko Tsuboi (N)

Department of Psychology, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA.

Wendy S Francis (WS)

Department of Psychology, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA.

Jason T Jameson (JT)

Department of Psychology, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA.

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Classifications MeSH