Dissociating the time courses of the cross-modal semantic priming effects elicited by naturalistic sounds and spoken words

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Abstract

The present study compared the time courses of the cross-modal semantic priming effects elicited by naturalistic sounds and spoken words on visual picture processing. Following an auditory prime, a picture (or blank frame) was briefly presented and then immediately masked. The participants had to judge whether or not a picture had been presented. Naturalistic sounds consistently elicited a cross-modal semantic priming effect on visual sensitivity (d') for pictures (higher d' in the congruent than in the incongruent condition) at the 350-ms rather than at the 1,000-ms stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA). Spoken words mainly elicited a cross-modal semantic priming effect at the 1,000-ms rather than at the 350-ms SOA, but this effect was modulated by the order of testing these two SOAs. It would therefore appear that visual picture processing can be rapidly primed by naturalistic sounds via cross-modal associations, and this effect is short lived. In contrast, spoken words prime visual picture processing over a wider range of prime-target intervals, though this effect was conditioned by the prior context.

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Chen, Y. C., & Spence, C. (2018). Dissociating the time courses of the cross-modal semantic priming effects elicited by naturalistic sounds and spoken words. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 25(3), 1138–1146. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-017-1324-6

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