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Convergent behavioral and neuropsychological evidence for a distinction between identification and production forms of repetition priming
Authors:Gabrieli J D  Vaidya C J  Stone M  Francis W S  Thompson-Schill S L  Fleischman D A  Tinklenberg J R  Yesavage J A  Wilson R S
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, Stanford University, California 94305, USA. gabrieli@psych.stanford.edu
Abstract:Four experiments examined a distinction between kinds of repetition priming which involve either the identification of the form or meaning of a stimulus or the production of a response on the basis of a cue. Patients with Alzheimer's disease had intact priming on picture-naming and category-exemplar identification tasks and impaired priming on word-stem completion and category-exemplar production tasks. Division of study-phase attention in healthy participants reduced priming on word-stem completion and category-exemplar production tasks but not on picture-naming and category-exemplar identification tasks. The parallel dissociations in normal and abnormal memory cannot be explained by implicit-explicit or perceptual-conceptual distinctions but are explained by an identification-production distinction. There may be separable cognitive and neural bases for implicit modulation of identification and production forms of knowledge.
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