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Author(s):  
Eduardo Navarrete ◽  
Silvia Benavides-Varela ◽  
Riccardina Lorusso ◽  
Barbara Arfè

AbstractAccessing semantic information has negative consequences for successive recovering attempts of similar information. For instance, in the course of picture-naming tasks, the time required to name an object is determined by the total number of items from the same category that have already been named; naming latencies increase proportionally to the total number of semantically related words named previously. This phenomenon is called cumulative semantic cost (or interference). Two picture-naming experiments with children (4–11 years old, 229 participants) investigate whether having successfully named the previous within-category items is a necessary condition for the cumulative semantic cost to appear. We anticipated that younger children would have a larger rate of nonresponses compared with older children, reflecting the fact that younger children have not yet consolidated many lexical representations. Our results confirmed this prediction. Critically, we also observed that cumulative semantic cost was independent of having successfully retrieved previous within-category lexical items. Furthermore, picture trials for which the previous within-category item elicited a nonresponse showed the same amount of cost as those picture trials for which the previous within-category item elicited a correct naming event. Our findings indicate that it is the attempt to retrieve a lexical unit, and not the successful retrieval of a specific lexical unit, that causes semantic cost in picture naming. This cost can be explained by a mechanism of weakening the semantic-to-lexical mappings of semantic coordinate words. The findings are also discussed in the context of retrieval-induced forgetting effects in memory recall research.



2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 447-471
Author(s):  
Denise Dillon ◽  
Josephine Pang

Abstract The study explores the influence of relative pronouns WHO or THAT on attributions of humanness across four categories of entities (unnamed nonhuman animals, named animals, machines, and people). Eighty-three university students performed an attribution task where they saw a priming phrase containing one category item with either WHO or THAT (e.g., deer who are …) and then two trait attribute items (Uniquely Human UH/Human Nature HN word pairs; e.g., distant-nervous), from which they selected the trait attribute most meaningfully suited to the phrase. Data were analyzed with a repeated measures 2 (humanness: HN traits, UH traits) × 2 (pronoun: WHO, THAT) × 4 (category: unnamed animals, named animals, machines, people) ANOVA. Participants responded relatively faster to HN trait attributes than to UH traits, and responded faster to named animals than to all other entities. Faster responses also ensued for people-WHO pairings than people-THAT pairings, and vice versa for named animals.



Author(s):  
Permata Wulandari ◽  
Niken Iwani Surya Putri ◽  
Salina Kassim ◽  
Liyu Adikasari Sulung

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to measure the pattern of contract agreement process to map various banks’ position in perceiving Sharia conduct. This is done by incorporating the dynamics of culture, market demand and Sharia literacy in different banks. Finding of this research will serve as the formula to map the latent degree of Islamic bank’s commitment to their strategic vision and identity as an Islamic-based financial institution. Design/methodology/approach This research develops its theoretical background in classical and contemporary literature review on murabahah contract in Islamic perspective. Focus group discussion (FGD) and in-depth interview are conducted on 32 bankers (in 14 Islamic banks), two National Sharia Council, five academicians and three central bank representatives as an input for qualitative analysis. Content analysis is utilized in this paper to emphasize the process of discovering the relationship between dynamic factors affecting contract agreement process in murabahah scheme in Indonesian banking. Findings There are four dimensions affecting the contract agreement: fairness to customer, country regulation, perceived business practicality and product characteristic. The four dimensions are assumed to be influenced with categories proposed, as the category item is mostly repeated and is perceived to be significant in the participant’s perspective. Originality/value This research will be beneficial in mapping the determinant of degree of Sharia compliance in Sharia banking in Indonesia, focusing on the contract agreement process.





2000 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Russell H. Fazio ◽  
Carol J. Williams ◽  
Martha C. Powell


1977 ◽  
Vol 41 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1143-1146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Calvin D. Sowder

A 2 × 2 × 2 factorial experiment examined the effects on recall of (a) blocked and random sequential organization during presentation of categorized lists, (b) presence or absence of category item cues at recall, and (c) presence or absence of category label cues at recall. 24 subjects in the blocked-presentation condition and 24 subjects in the random-presentation condition learned and recalled lists in all of the four conditions of cues at recall. Significant effects were noted for both category label and category item cues following blocked presentation, but only category label cues significantly affected recall following random presentation. More words per category were recalled for blocked than for random list presentation. The presence of item cues at recall suppressed the words per category recalled.



1977 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 1062 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sue R. Rosner ◽  
Donald S. Hayes


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