Flexibility over automaticity: Separable representations for colours and words |
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Authors: | Moran Twick Asher Cohen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology , The Hebrew University , Jerusalem, Israel moran.ohayon@mail.huji.ac.il;3. Department of Psychology , The Hebrew University , Jerusalem, Israel |
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Abstract: | This study demonstrates that associations between colour words and the colours they denote are not mandatory. Experiments 1–3 used a go/no-go task in which participants responded to one print colour and one word and withheld response from another print colour and another word. In Experiment 1, the content of the words denoted noncolour entities. In Experiment 2 the two words denoted two colours that were different from the target print colours. In Experiment 3, the words denoted the same colours as the target print colours but each response set included incompatible print colour and word (e.g., one response to the print colour blue and the word “green” and another response to the print colour green and the word “blue”). Participants performed equally well in all the experiments. Experiment 4a used Arabic digits and words denoting numbers, two formats that are known to have shared representations. Here, participants had difficulties separating their responses to the digits and words. These results suggest that representations of words are distinct from the content that they represent, supporting the existence of distinct verbal and colour modules. |
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Keywords: | Modularity Redundancy gain Stroop Verbal representations Visual dimensions |
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