2014
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-013-0442-y
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A behavioral database for masked form priming

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, multi-condition experiment to address these problems. Over 1000 participants from 14 sites respon… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(122 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…The converging evidence suggests that the ID and position of external letters and particularly the initial letters of a word have special importance in word recognition. These findings mirror TL effects found in masked priming experiments and megastudies (Adelman et al, 2014;Perea & Lupker, 2003). However, there are currently no studies showing evidence of TL preview benefit effects in transparent orthographies such as German.…”
Section: Orthographic Effectssupporting
confidence: 77%
“…The converging evidence suggests that the ID and position of external letters and particularly the initial letters of a word have special importance in word recognition. These findings mirror TL effects found in masked priming experiments and megastudies (Adelman et al, 2014;Perea & Lupker, 2003). However, there are currently no studies showing evidence of TL preview benefit effects in transparent orthographies such as German.…”
Section: Orthographic Effectssupporting
confidence: 77%
“…Given that we obtained strong effects of word frequency on accuracy and RTs, it is unlikely that the frequency range covered by our materials was too small to allow us to detect the interaction. However, it has to be noticed that the word frequency range was smaller than the range in the materials used by Brysbaert et al (2016a), with a minimum SUBTLEX frequency of 0.12 and a maximum of 501.33 ( M = 18.73; see Adelman et al, 2014, for the materials used in Brysbaert et al, 2016a). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…The prime duration used in our first experiment (58 ms) is fairly representative of numerous masked priming studies in alphabetic (e.g. Adelman et al, 2014;Forster & Davis, 1984) and non-alphabetic languages (Chen, Lin, & Ferrand, 2003;Shen & Forster, 1999;Verdonschot, Lai, Chen, Tamaoka, & Schiller, 2015;Xia & Andrews, 2015;You, Zhang, & Verdonschot, 2012). In our second experiment, we used a prime duration (33 ms) which was considerably shorter than the one conventionally used.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%