Taylor T E, Lupker S J
Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2001 Jan;27(1):117-38.
S. J. Lupker, P. Brown, and L. Colombo (1997) reported that target naming latencies are strongly affected by the difficulty of the other stimuli in a trial block, an effect they attributed to readers' strategic use of a time criterion to guide responding. In the present research, the authors asked whether there are also trial-by-trial ("sequential") effects by examining naming latency as a function of the difficulty of the preceding stimulus. In Experiment 1, both nonwords and high-frequency regular words were named more rapidly following a word than a nonword. Experiments 2, 3, and 4 were parallel experiments involving a variety of stimulus types (e.g., high- and low-frequency inconsistent words, easy and hard nonwords). In all cases, similar sequential effects were observed (i.e., all stimulus types had shorter latencies following an easier-to-name than a harder-to-name stimulus). In terms of the time-criterion account, criterion placement appears to be affected by the relative difficulty of the preceding stimulus in a way that is independent of stimulus type.
S. J. 卢普克、P. 布朗和L. 科伦坡(1997年)报告称,在一个试验组块中,目标命名潜伏期会受到其他刺激难度的强烈影响,他们将这种效应归因于读者策略性地使用时间标准来指导反应。在本研究中,作者通过将命名潜伏期作为前一个刺激难度的函数进行考察,来探究是否也存在逐次试验(“序列性”)效应。在实验1中,与在非词之后相比,在一个单词之后对非词和高频规则词的命名都更快。实验2、3和4是涉及多种刺激类型(例如高频和低频不一致词、简单和复杂非词)的平行实验。在所有情况下,都观察到了类似的序列效应(即,与较难命名的刺激相比,所有刺激类型在较易命名的刺激之后的潜伏期都更短)。就时间标准解释而言,标准设置似乎受到前一个刺激相对难度的影响,且这种影响方式与刺激类型无关。