Abstract
In three experiments, subjects searched through word lists for a single target word. Search was faster when the target word belonged to a different semantic category from that of the background words with visual similarity controlled. This semantic effect increased with number of items to be searched through, and it obtained whether the target was cued visually or verbally. Semantic homogeneity within the background also speeded search, but only when subjects had no prior knowledge of the nature of a list. Several models of the semantic effect are described. All contrast the encoding of physical identity with the encoding of semantic attributes, but they differ in ascribing the effect to: (1) the relative access times for these codes, (2) the power of the codes in dealing with multiple comparisons, or (3) the attentional demands of comparison using different levels of code.
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This research was supported by SSRC Grant HR 3301 to the first author. A preliminary version of this paper was presented to the annual conference of the British Psychological Society, April, 1976.
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Henderson, L., Chard, J. Semantic effects in visual word detection with visual similarity controlled. Perception & Psychophysics 23, 290–298 (1978). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03199712
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03199712