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This corresponds to the intuitive and natural upright target state of conventional learning tasks.
Specifically, at short SOAs an upright prime followed by the identical upright target would have most likely appeared as one continuous stimulus due to the iconic memory trace of the prime [33].
In contrast, a rotated prime followed by an upright target would have engendered a very obvious transition, making it clear that these were two different stimuli and likely slowing down response to the target.
We employed a repetition priming paradigm in which briefly presented masked objects (primes) were followed by an upright target object which had to be named as rapidly as possible.
Our present findings, however, contradict those of a related repetition priming study conducted by Arguin and Leek [31], in which a brief prime presented in different image-plane orientations was followed, after a variable blank period, by an upright target that had to be named.
Similar(55)
The effect of inversion (relative to upright targets) was smaller but significant (F 1,29) = 5.197, p = 0.03).
Contrary to these predictions, we did not find preferential priming for upright prime-target pairs compared to other orientations even for very short prime durations (see Fig. 2).
As such, these models would predict priming only for identically oriented (i.e., upright) prime-target pairs for short prime durations, with correspondingly smaller amounts of priming for more rotated primes, as compensation for object misorientation (whatever form that takes) could not be completed in the time available.
Participants correctly reported the presence or absence of the target (upright T) with 61% mean accuracy.
NASA said the spacecraft's descent had gone flawlessly and that the capsule had landed upright, almost hitting its target in a thick fog.
The target was an upright or inverted T that was colored either orange or green.
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