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Replicable unconscious semantic priming

S C Draine1, A G Greenwald

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle 98195-1525, USA. seandr@microsoft.com

Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
|September 22, 1998
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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This study demonstrates unconscious cognition through subliminal priming effects. Even when primes were not consciously perceived, their meaning influenced participants' responses, showing implicit processing.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Subliminal perception research investigates unconscious processing.
  • Priming effects occur when exposure to one stimulus influences response to a subsequent stimulus.
  • Understanding unconscious cognition is crucial for various psychological and neurological models.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate subliminal priming effects on word classification tasks.
  • To determine if semantic congruence influences responses under conditions of minimal prime awareness.
  • To confirm the presence of unconscious cognition using rigorous methodological controls.

Main Methods:

  • Four experiments utilized visually presented target words (pleasant-unpleasant, male-female names).

Related Experiment Videos

  • Prime words were either semantically congruent or incongruent with target words.
  • Brief prime durations (17-50 ms) with pre- and postmasking, and constrained response latencies, ensured subliminal presentation.
  • Main Results:

    • Consistently higher error rates were observed for incongruent priming trials compared to congruent trials.
    • Analysis of priming magnitude as a function of prime perceptibility confirmed the findings.
    • Data met the significant-intercept criterion, indicating robust subliminal priming.

    Conclusions:

    • The experiments provide strong evidence for subliminal priming effects.
    • These findings support the existence of unconscious cognition and implicit semantic processing.
    • Methodological controls successfully demonstrated that responses were influenced by non-perceived stimuli.