Figure 1.
Examples of experimental trials.
On half the trials, the prime was the same object as the target and on the other half it was a different object. The prime could be in one of 7 orientations ranging from 0° to 180° in 30° steps, while the target was always upright. The duration of the prime was varied by varying the prime-mask SOA.
Table 1.
Summary of overall priming effects and accuracy levels in Experiment 1, averaged across orientations.
Table 2.
Mean target naming times (and SD) across prime duration and orientation conditions in Experiment 1.
Figure 2.
Mean priming effect in Experiment 1, plotted as a function of prime orientation for each prime duration separately.
The size of the priming effect is the difference between RTs for Different prime trials and RTs for Same prime trials. Error bars represent within-subject s.e.m for the priming effect.
Figure 3.
Mean reaction times for naming rotated objects in Experiment 2, plotted as a function of object orientation.
Error bars represent within-subject s.e.m for the orientation effect.