Abstract
Subjects can name color words faster than they can name color patches. To account for that effect, a generic model of naming is described which assumes that words access the mental lexicon directly, whereas color patches do so only indirectly via an initial imaginal or semantic representation. However, Lund (1927) reported that the naming advantage for words disappeared when all the items to be named on a page were the same (i.e., they were blocked). In the present study, three experiments are reported that were designed to provide a clearer empirical definition of Lund’s blocking effect and to ascertain the extent to which it requires a modification of the generic model. The blocked lists had 50 items arranged into 10 blocks, with each block homogeneous with respect to color. The block lengths were either all a predictable length of 5 items or they varied randomly from 1 to 9 items. The data indicated the following: (1) The blocking effect occurred even when the task required a full identification of each item, and (2) the blocking effect was confined to within-block transitions. Blocking seemed to eliminate the word advantage by allowing the subject to re-use the lexical entry used for the immediately prior item, which is consistent with the generic model.
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The research reported herein was based on work supported by a National Science Foundation Fellowship to the first author. Any opinions, findings, or recommendations in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
—Accepted by previous editor, Margaret Jean Intons-Peterson
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Seifert, L.S., Johnson, N.F. On the naming of color words and color patches. Memory & Cognition 22, 169–180 (1994). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03208888
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03208888