1982
DOI: 10.1037/0096-1523.8.5.739
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Semantic context effects in visual word recognition, sentence processing, and reading: Evidence for semantic strategies.

Abstract: Earlier research studying the effects of semantic context on single words suggested that subjects may have two strategies for using a context (Becker, 1980). The present research finds that the semantic context strategies may be used in reading short sentences. Further, individual differences in context effects both in a word-level task and in a sentence-level task are related to individual differences in reading continuous text. These results are presented within the framework of the verification model (Becke… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…A three-factor analysis of the error data yielded a significant interaction between stimulus set and prime type [F(2,232) suggested (Eisenberg & Becker, 1982), the model he proposed does not apply when the SOA between prime and target presentation is short. In effect, the short-SOA results support Becker's interpretation of the stimulus set effect's being strategic in nature.…”
Section: Category Setmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A three-factor analysis of the error data yielded a significant interaction between stimulus set and prime type [F(2,232) suggested (Eisenberg & Becker, 1982), the model he proposed does not apply when the SOA between prime and target presentation is short. In effect, the short-SOA results support Becker's interpretation of the stimulus set effect's being strategic in nature.…”
Section: Category Setmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What remains to be determined is whether or not changes in proportion of related pairs produce similar results when subjects are induced to adopt an expectancy or inhibition-dominant strategy. If this is This study was intended to address the argument raised by Becker (e.g., Becker, 1980;Eisenberg & Becker, 1982) that his verification model, in conjunction with two hypothesized strategies of word recognition, represents a viable alternative to dual-process-based models of word recognition and semantic priming. With different stimuli-or at least independently selected stimuli-and more subjects (60 vs. 48), the pattern of results indicated a qualitative difference in performance on the two stimulus sets.…”
Section: Category Setmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The respective successes and failures of two-process theory and the verification theory to explain the basic facts of contextual effects have been discussed elsewhere (Eisenberg & Becker, 1982;Schuberth, Spoehr, & Lane, 1981;Stanovich & West, 1983). The focus of the present experiments is on how well these two models predict the effects of changes in the contextual environment-which presumably influence the expectations a subject may entertain as the experiment progresses-on the pattern of lexical decision latencies for various test items.…”
mentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Experiments 7 and 8), and by increasing the delay between the last word of the context to be read and the presentation of the word to be named (Stanovich & West, 1981, Experiment 2). Becker (1980;Eisenberg & Becker, 1982) has presented an alternative explanation for the effects of sentence contexts. In his verification model, a semantic context elicits a set of candidate words against which the test stimulus can be matched following preliminary sensory analysis.…”
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confidence: 99%