Do Children and the Elderly Show Heightened Semantic Priming? How to Answer the Question
- Resource Type
- Authors
- Loren J. Chapman; Michael B. Miller; Timothy E. Curran; Jean P. Chapman
- Source
- Developmental Review. 14:159-185
- Subject
- Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Context (language use)
Cognition
Difference score
Education
Developmental psychology
Psychiatry and Mental health
Group differences
Argument
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Word recognition
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Meaning (existential)
Psychology
Priming (psychology)
- Language
- ISSN
- 0273-2297
"Semantic priming" has two meanings, one an internal activation and the other a performance difference between responses to primed and unprimed stimuli. Individual and group differences in the performance difference score are heavily influenced by overall speed and/or accuracy and so are a flawed reflection of internal activation. These relationships obscure the meaning of many published findings of greater than normal priming difference scores in special groups, such as children and the elderly. Meaningful comparison of groups on the activation underlying priming difference scores requires removing the effects of overall performance level. We discuss ways of doing so. We make this argument in the context of semantic priming research but it applies equally to other paradigms that use difference scores for the comparison of groups of differing performance levels.