2015
DOI: 10.1080/23273798.2014.1002797
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Semantic effects in the word–word interference task: a comment on Roelofs, Piai, and Schriefers (2013)

Abstract: Roelofs, Piai, and Schriefers (Language and Cognitive Processes) test both the WEAVER++ model of word production and the response-exclusion account of performance in Stroop-like tasks against data from the word-word interference (WW1) task, and conclude that whereas the WEAVER++ successfully accounts for those data, the response-exclusion hypothesis fails. Here we show that once recent data from the WW1 task are considered, both models fail.Keywords: word production; word-word interference task; lexical acces… Show more

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“…The distractor element appears within the same trial, that is, simultaneously with, or slightly before or after, the target itself. This is the type of manipulation behind Stroop-like interference paradigms, such as the picture-word interference (e.g., Rosinski, 1977 ; Lupker, 1979 ; La Heij, 1988 ; Schriefers et al, 1990 ; Damian and Bowers, 2003 ; Roelofs, 2003 ; Finkbeiner and Caramazza, 2006 ) and the word–word interference tasks ( Glaser and Glaser, 1989 ; La Heij et al, 1990 ; Roelofs et al, 2013 ; Treccani and Mulatti, 2015 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The distractor element appears within the same trial, that is, simultaneously with, or slightly before or after, the target itself. This is the type of manipulation behind Stroop-like interference paradigms, such as the picture-word interference (e.g., Rosinski, 1977 ; Lupker, 1979 ; La Heij, 1988 ; Schriefers et al, 1990 ; Damian and Bowers, 2003 ; Roelofs, 2003 ; Finkbeiner and Caramazza, 2006 ) and the word–word interference tasks ( Glaser and Glaser, 1989 ; La Heij et al, 1990 ; Roelofs et al, 2013 ; Treccani and Mulatti, 2015 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%