Publication year
2002Source
Memory & Cognition, 30, 2, (2002), pp. 217-225ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ DCC CO
Former Organization
SW OZ NICI CO
Journal title
Memory & Cognition
Volume
vol. 30
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 217
Page end
p. 225
Subject
PsycholinguisticsAbstract
In two experiments, we investigated mediated two-step priming (e.g., from lion to stripes via tiger) and three-step priming (e.g., from mane to stripes via lion and tiger). Experiment 1 showed robust two-step priming in the double lexical decision task. In Experiment 2, we tested for three-step priming and investigated the possibility that it is not association strength based on free association, but frequency of co-occurrence, that causes three-step priming. Co-occurrence has been proposed as a measure of familiarity and semantic relatedness. Significant three-step priming was obtained. Lexical co-occurrence could not account for the effect. However, a more global measure of semantic similarity that includes the similarity of the contexts in which concepts occur revealed that the three-step pairs were semantically related. If this global measure provides a proper estimate of the semantic relatedness of our items, then three-step priming is consistent not only with spreading activation models, but also with distributed memory models and the compound cue model.
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- Faculty of Social Sciences [28728]
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