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Related Experiment Videos

Measuring differences in preactivation on the Internet: the content category superiority effect.

Jan Eichstaedt1

  • 1Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg, Germany. jan.eichstaedt@unibw-hamburg.de

Experimental Psychology
|November 29, 2002
PubMed
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Preactivating specific memory content, like computer operating systems or expected word valence, influences visual word recognition speed. This content category superiority effect (CCSE) shows how implicit memory impacts task performance.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Memory Studies

Background:

  • Preactivation of specific memory content can influence cognitive task performance.
  • The content category superiority effect (CCSE) describes how memory content influences recognition.
  • Implicit memory plays a crucial role in shaping conscious perception and reaction times.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the content category superiority effect (CCSE) in visual word recognition.
  • To demonstrate how preactivated memory content, influenced by personal experience and explicit instructions, affects recognition latencies.
  • To establish CCSE as a foundation for novel implicit memory measurement techniques.

Main Methods:

  • Two internet-based studies were conducted using a visual word recognition task.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Participants repeatedly viewed target words flashed for 400 ms, followed by a 200 ms mask.
  • Experiment 1 examined effects of preactivated memory content (e.g., computer OS use); Experiment 2 manipulated participant expectations (positive vs. negative words).
  • Main Results:

    • Differences in preactivated memory content significantly influenced z-scored visual word recognition latencies.
    • Instructional sets demonstrably affected recognition speed, with participants faster on expected word types (positive or negative).
    • The CCSE was robust across different types of preactivated content and experimental manipulations.

    Conclusions:

    • The content category superiority effect (CCSE) provides empirical evidence for the influence of implicit memory content on cognitive tasks.
    • CCSE can be leveraged to develop new measures of implicit memory, such as the Motive Superiority Measure.
    • Latency-based measures derived from CCSE may offer insights into implicit motives and self-focused attention.