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Slow categorization but fast naming for photographs of manipulable objects
Authors:Joshua P. Salmon  Heath E. Matheson  Patricia A. McMullen
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaJoshua.salmon@dal.ca;3. Department of Psychology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada
Abstract:Previous research investigating the influence of object manipulability (the properties of objects that make them appropriate for manual action) on object identification has not tightly controlled for effects of both object familiarity and age of acquisition of objects. The current research carefully controlled these two variables on a balanced set of 120 photographs and showed significant effects of object manipulability during object categorization (Experiment 1) and object naming (Experiment 2). Critically, the effects showed a manipulability-effect reversal, with faster categorization of non-manipulable objects, but faster naming of manipulable objects, suggesting that task moderates the direction of the manipulability effect. Exposure duration (the amount of time the object was visible to participants) was also investigated, but no interactions between exposure duration and manipulability were found. These results indicate that not only can manipulability influence object identification, but the way in which it does depends on the task.
Keywords:Manipulability  Action  Identification  Naming  Categorization
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