2014
DOI: 10.1521/soco.2014.32.supp.47
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Priming is not Priming is not Priming

Abstract: We propose a taxonomy according to which priming studies in social cognition research can be classified. Long-term priming is characterized by a long delay between the prime and test situations (several minutes or more) whereas short-term priming studies investigate short-term consequences (occurring within hundreds of milliseconds) of primes on subsequent target processing and response activation. Within short-term priming, we distinguish between response priming and semantic priming designs, and discuss the … Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…Social psychologists also frequently describe priming as occurring "outside of awareness," but here the term almost always refers to the awareness of the influence of the prime on subsequent responses rather than of the prime itself (Molden, 2014, this issue). Indeed, many, if not most, priming effects involve conscious processing of the relevant stimuli (see in this issue Bargh, 2014;Ferguson & Mann, 2014;Fujita & Trope, 2014;Higgins & Eitam, 2014;Wentura & Rothermund, 2014). Thus, failing to specify the priming mechanisms under investigation can create misunderstandings that lead researchers more familiar with the implicit memory literature (in which conclusive demonstrations of the complete absence of awareness have proven difficult, see in this issue Doyen et al, 2014;Newell & Shanks, 2014) to doubt any claims that are made.…”
Section: Conceptualizing and Communicating About Priming Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social psychologists also frequently describe priming as occurring "outside of awareness," but here the term almost always refers to the awareness of the influence of the prime on subsequent responses rather than of the prime itself (Molden, 2014, this issue). Indeed, many, if not most, priming effects involve conscious processing of the relevant stimuli (see in this issue Bargh, 2014;Ferguson & Mann, 2014;Fujita & Trope, 2014;Higgins & Eitam, 2014;Wentura & Rothermund, 2014). Thus, failing to specify the priming mechanisms under investigation can create misunderstandings that lead researchers more familiar with the implicit memory literature (in which conclusive demonstrations of the complete absence of awareness have proven difficult, see in this issue Doyen et al, 2014;Newell & Shanks, 2014) to doubt any claims that are made.…”
Section: Conceptualizing and Communicating About Priming Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Priming is well studied in psychology and neuroscience [592] and two major theoretical frameworks for modeling priming are found in cognitive architectures: spreading activation (ACT-R [532], Recommendation Architecture [106], Shruti [486], CELTS [147], LIDA [169], ARS/SiMA [467], DUAL [414], NARS [577]) and attractor networks (CLARION [220], Darwinian Neurodynamics [156].). The current consensus in the literature is that spreading activation has greater explanation power, but attractor networks are considered more biologically plausible [325].…”
Section: Primingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 Following the presentation of gender-typed occupational contexts, participants were required to report the sex of target faces (i.e., Go trials) unless an auditory tone signalled they should withhold their response (i.e., Stop trials). Sequential priming tasks such as these are commonly used to activate stereotype-related knowledge in memory (Kidder, White, Hinojos, Sandoval, & Crites, 2018;Wentura & Rothermund, 2014). Although it is tempting to presume that stereotypic responses must be difficult to stop (Bargh, 1999;Bartholow et al, 2006), there is good reason to suspect that the opposite may be the casestereotype-consistent responses may be inhibited more effectively than stereotypeinconsistent responses.…”
Section: Stop Stereotypingmentioning
confidence: 99%