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Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes

At the interface between scene perception and speech production, we investigated how rapidly action scenes can activate semantic and lexical information. Experiment 1 examined how complex action-scene primes, presented for 150 ms, 100 ms, or 50 ms and subsequently masked, influenced the speed with w...

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Autores principales: Zwitserlood, Pienie, Bölte, Jens, Hofmann, Reinhild, Meier, Claudine C., Dobel, Christian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5898714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29652939
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194762
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author Zwitserlood, Pienie
Bölte, Jens
Hofmann, Reinhild
Meier, Claudine C.
Dobel, Christian
author_facet Zwitserlood, Pienie
Bölte, Jens
Hofmann, Reinhild
Meier, Claudine C.
Dobel, Christian
author_sort Zwitserlood, Pienie
collection PubMed
description At the interface between scene perception and speech production, we investigated how rapidly action scenes can activate semantic and lexical information. Experiment 1 examined how complex action-scene primes, presented for 150 ms, 100 ms, or 50 ms and subsequently masked, influenced the speed with which immediately following action-picture targets are named. Prime and target actions were either identical, showed the same action with different actors and environments, or were unrelated. Relative to unrelated primes, identical and same-action primes facilitated naming the target action, even when presented for 50 ms. In Experiment 2, neutral primes assessed the direction of effects. Identical and same-action scenes induced facilitation but unrelated actions induced interference. In Experiment 3, written verbs were used as targets for naming, preceded by action primes. When target verbs denoted the prime action, clear facilitation was obtained. In contrast, interference was observed when target verbs were phonologically similar, but otherwise unrelated, to the names of prime actions. This is clear evidence for word-form activation by masked action scenes. Masked action pictures thus provide conceptual information that is detailed enough to facilitate apprehension and naming of immediately following scenes. Masked actions even activate their word-form information–as is evident when targets are words. We thus show how language production can be primed with briefly flashed masked action scenes, in answer to long-standing questions in scene processing.
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spelling pubmed-58987142018-05-06 Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes Zwitserlood, Pienie Bölte, Jens Hofmann, Reinhild Meier, Claudine C. Dobel, Christian PLoS One Research Article At the interface between scene perception and speech production, we investigated how rapidly action scenes can activate semantic and lexical information. Experiment 1 examined how complex action-scene primes, presented for 150 ms, 100 ms, or 50 ms and subsequently masked, influenced the speed with which immediately following action-picture targets are named. Prime and target actions were either identical, showed the same action with different actors and environments, or were unrelated. Relative to unrelated primes, identical and same-action primes facilitated naming the target action, even when presented for 50 ms. In Experiment 2, neutral primes assessed the direction of effects. Identical and same-action scenes induced facilitation but unrelated actions induced interference. In Experiment 3, written verbs were used as targets for naming, preceded by action primes. When target verbs denoted the prime action, clear facilitation was obtained. In contrast, interference was observed when target verbs were phonologically similar, but otherwise unrelated, to the names of prime actions. This is clear evidence for word-form activation by masked action scenes. Masked action pictures thus provide conceptual information that is detailed enough to facilitate apprehension and naming of immediately following scenes. Masked actions even activate their word-form information–as is evident when targets are words. We thus show how language production can be primed with briefly flashed masked action scenes, in answer to long-standing questions in scene processing. Public Library of Science 2018-04-13 /pmc/articles/PMC5898714/ /pubmed/29652939 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194762 Text en © 2018 Zwitserlood et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zwitserlood, Pienie
Bölte, Jens
Hofmann, Reinhild
Meier, Claudine C.
Dobel, Christian
Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes
title Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes
title_full Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes
title_fullStr Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes
title_full_unstemmed Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes
title_short Seeing for speaking: Semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes
title_sort seeing for speaking: semantic and lexical information provided by briefly presented, naturalistic action scenes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5898714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29652939
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194762
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