Washington University, St. Louis, MO, USA.
University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2018 Aug;25(4):1500-1506. doi: 10.3758/s13423-017-1415-4.
It is well known that words can prime the identification of related pictures. But how are these connections between words and their visual representations prioritized? Here we show that action modulates word-picture priming. Participants in three experiments either did nothing or made a simple, arbitrary action (a keypress) while reading a word. Next, they searched for a target that was superimposed on one of several images. In some trials, the target was on an image that represented the previously seen word; in other trials, that image contained a distractor. The word primed the picture during visual search, such that targets on that (task-irrelevant) image were found more quickly. Importantly, the magnitude of this word-picture priming was greater if participants had made an action while reading the word. These results are the first to implicate action as a factor that can modulate word-picture associations, and they show that the effects of action on perception are more profound than has previously been believed: Elements that share only semantic (but not sensory) overlap with acted-on objects receive attentional priority.
众所周知,单词可以提示人们识别相关的图片。但是,单词与其视觉表示之间的这些联系是如何被优先处理的呢?在这里,我们展示了动作可以调节单词-图片启动。在三个实验中,参与者要么什么也不做,要么在阅读单词时进行简单的、任意的动作(按键)。接下来,他们搜索一个目标,该目标叠加在几个图像中的一个上。在一些试验中,目标在代表之前看到的单词的图像上;在其他试验中,该图像包含干扰项。单词在视觉搜索中提示了图片,使得在那个(任务无关)图像上的目标被更快地找到。重要的是,如果参与者在阅读单词时进行了动作,那么这种单词-图片启动的幅度就会更大。这些结果首次表明,动作是可以调节单词-图片联想的一个因素,并且它们表明,动作对感知的影响比以前认为的更为深刻:与被动作对象只有语义(而不是感觉)重叠的元素会获得优先注意。