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Repetition blindness in rapid lists: activation and inhibition versus construction and attribution
Authors:Whittlesea Bruce W A  Masson Michael E J
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada. bruce_whittlesea@sfu.ca
Abstract:The authors examine the repetition blindness effect--the failure to report one of the occurrences of a word presented twice in a rapid list. This phenomenon has been ascribed to inhibitory processes that prevent immediate tokenization of the 2nd occurrence of a repeated word. The authors present several kinds of evidence against that account, including observations that repetition blindness (a) does not occur when repetitions are not embedded in a list of familiar orthographic units, (b) is alleviated by precuing the subject with the identity of the word that may repeat within a rapid list, and (c) can be caused by cues presented after the list, when the opportunity for inhibition has passed. It is proposed that repetition blindness can better be understood through the principles of construction and attribution.
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