1996
DOI: 10.3758/bf03201096
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Cross-language facilitation, semantic blindness, and the relation between language and memory: A reply to Altarriba and Soltano

Abstract: This comment corrects some inaccuracies, points to some methodological problems, and makes three substantive observations regarding the Altarriba and Soltano (1996) article. First, token individuation theory does not explain what is new and interesting in the Altarriba and Soltano data, namely cross-language semantic facilitation in lists and a list-sentence effect, that is, a large difference in the effect of semantic repetition when identical translation equivalents occurred in sentences versus lists. Second… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…One was to define correct retrieval as correct inclusion of the added or target letter (i.e., correct spelling of the entire word was unnecessary). The other was to conditionalize correct target recall on inclusion of the pretarget letter: Responses containing missing pretargets (e.g., w i ldierness misproduced as weldness, and cal e ndear misproduced as calander ) were discarded for logical and theoretical reasons that have been noted in many recent studies of RD (see, e.g., MacKay et al, 1994; MacKay, Abrams, Pedroza, & Miller, 1996). If a participant does not perceive the pretarget, a repeated-target trial is unrepeated from a psychological point of view, so that including these trials in the means would underestimate the true degree of retrieval RD.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One was to define correct retrieval as correct inclusion of the added or target letter (i.e., correct spelling of the entire word was unnecessary). The other was to conditionalize correct target recall on inclusion of the pretarget letter: Responses containing missing pretargets (e.g., w i ldierness misproduced as weldness, and cal e ndear misproduced as calander ) were discarded for logical and theoretical reasons that have been noted in many recent studies of RD (see, e.g., MacKay et al, 1994; MacKay, Abrams, Pedroza, & Miller, 1996). If a participant does not perceive the pretarget, a repeated-target trial is unrepeated from a psychological point of view, so that including these trials in the means would underestimate the true degree of retrieval RD.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The present paradigm clarified this issue by demonstrating that RD is both a perceptual phenomenon (because detection was better for unrepeated- than repeated-letter misspellings) and a retrieval phenomenon (because retrieval was better for unrepeated- than repeated-letter misspellings). However, neither perceptual RD nor retrieval RD interacted with aging in the present data, ruling out the perception versus retrieval dimension as a viable basis for explaining the differing age effects in MacKay et al (1994) versus the present study.Another distinguishing procedural feature is that the present paradigm presents the repeated elements simultaneouslyA2 in different spatial positions, whereas the standard RSVP paradigm presents the repeated elements sequentially in the same spatial position, which allows a role for low-level forward and backward visual masking in RD (see MacKay, Abrams, Pedroza, & Miller, 1996). However, we can think of no way that reduced forward and backward visual masking in the present paradigm might explain the different pattern of age effects in the two studies.In lieu of a procedurally based account, theoretical details of how the repeated elements interact to cause RD in the two paradigms warrant further examination.…”
Section: The Inhibition Repetition Deficit Hypothesismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Regarding the first point, an influence of the semantic properties of stimuli on RB has been reported by several authors including MacKay, Abrams, Pedroza, and Miller (1996), MacKay and Miller (1994), O'Reilly and Neely (1993) and Parasuraman and Martin (2001); but see Altarriba & Soltano (1996) and Kanwisher & Potter (1990). According to Bavelier (1994), object tokens are the result of a gradual assembling of different types or codes (visual, phonological, and semantic) with a single spatiotemporal token.…”
mentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Under this framework, an inhibitory process that follows activation of lexical and phonological nodes makes the second instance of a rapidly presented word harder to detect (see, e.g., Marohn, 1991, andMacKay, Abrams, Pedroza, &Miller, 1996, for detailed theories within the inhibition framework). Although inhibitory processes have never been studied in older adults for the rapid rates of auditory processing that are required to induce RD (see , young adults should exhibit more RD than older adults if RD reflects inhibitory processes that resemble those examined in other paradigms.…”
Section: Inhibition Deficits and Rdmentioning
confidence: 99%