Paller K A, Mayes A R, Thompson K M, Young A W, Roberts J, Meudell P R
University of Manchester, United Kingdom.
Brain Cogn. 1992 Jan;18(1):46-59. doi: 10.1016/0278-2626(92)90110-8.
Priming was studied in a task that required a speeded response to photographs of faces. On each trial, subjects viewed two faces and decided if the same person was shown twice or if two different people were shown. Both familiar and unfamiliar (i.e., well-known and unknown) faces were used, and some face pairs were repeated with a mean delay of about 10 min. Repetition was associated with faster reaction times in young subjects (Experiment 1) as well as in amnesic patients and age-matched control subjects (Experiment 2). The patients' reaction times were slower overall, although the magnitude of the priming effect did not differ from that in the control subjects. This preservation of a normal reaction-time facilitation in subjects with impaired recognition memory for faces occurred for both familiar and unfamiliar faces, suggesting that amnesia does not necessarily interfere with the acquisition of new information as indexed by this priming effect.
在一项要求对人脸照片做出快速反应的任务中,对启动效应进行了研究。在每次试验中,受试者观看两张人脸,并判断展示的是同一个人两次,还是两个不同的人。使用了熟悉的和不熟悉的(即知名的和不知名的)人脸,并且一些人脸对会以平均约10分钟的延迟重复出现。重复出现与年轻受试者(实验1)以及失忆症患者和年龄匹配的对照受试者(实验2)更快的反应时间相关。尽管启动效应的大小与对照受试者没有差异,但患者的反应时间总体上较慢。对于熟悉的和不熟悉的人脸,在对面孔识别记忆受损的受试者中都出现了正常的反应时间促进现象,这表明失忆症不一定会干扰由这种启动效应所索引的新信息的获取。