2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2005.05.004
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Depth of lexical-semantic processing and sentential load

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Cited by 22 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
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“…Though the cognitive load account is plausible, there is no evidence that load has an effect on the level of detail of representations. In fact, previous research that examined whether cognitive load leads to less‐detailed representations found no such influence (Sanford, Sanford, Filik, & Molle, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Though the cognitive load account is plausible, there is no evidence that load has an effect on the level of detail of representations. In fact, previous research that examined whether cognitive load leads to less‐detailed representations found no such influence (Sanford, Sanford, Filik, & Molle, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The remaining 8 contained no changes across presentations. Previous work (see, e.g., A. J. S. Sanford et al, 2005) had demonstrated that this mixture of fillers-with and without changeseliminated the ability of participants to predict when a change might occur. The stimuli were assigned to six playlists; each contained only one of the six possible versions of each experimental stimuli.…”
Section: Enhancement and Suppression Effectsmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…It has been shown that detection is sensitive to clause status (A. J. Sanford, 2002), discourse focus (A. J. S. Sanford, Sanford, Molle, & Emmott, 2006;Sturt et al, 2004), syntactic and referential complexity (A. J. S. Sanford, Sanford, Filik, & Molle, 2005), and text-based devices of emphasis (Emmott, Sanford, & Dawydiak, 2007). Sturt et al (2004) used change detection to examine the effects of cleft constructions and of contextual manipulation of contrastive focus (comparable to Cutler & Fodor, 1979, who manipulated spoken stress).…”
Section: Experiments 2 Text-change Detection With Pseudocleft Construcmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To begin to answer this question, the first experiment employed the text-change paradigm (Christianson, 2008;Sanford, Sanford, Filik, & Molle, 2005;Sanford, Sanford, Molle, & Emmott, 2006). In this paradigm, also known as the change-detection paradigm, participants are given a text of some sort to read on a computer screen, and then they are presented with a second text that is either identical to the first text or changed very slightly in some way.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%