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  1. Unconscious priming according to multiple s-r rules.Andrea Kiesel, Wilfried Kunde & Joachim Hoffmann - 2007 - Cognition 104 (1):89-105.
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  • Unconscious semantic priming in the absence of partial awareness☆.Richard L. Abrams & Jessica Grinspan - 2007 - Consciousness and Cognition 16 (4):942-953.
    In a recent paper in Psychological Science, Kouider and Dupoux reported obtaining unconscious Stroop priming only when subjects had partial awareness of the masked distractor words . Kouider and Dupoux conjectured that semantic priming occurs only when such partial awareness is present. The present experiments tested this conjecture in an affective categorization priming task that differed from Kouider and Dupoux’s in using masked distractors that subjects had practiced earlier as visible words. Experiment 1 showed priming from practiced words when subjects (...)
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  • Congruity effects evoked by subliminally presented primes: Automaticity rather than semantic processing.M. Damian - 2001 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 27:154-165.
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  • Partial awareness creates the "illusion" of subliminal semantic priming.Sid Kouider & Emmanuel Dupoux - 2004 - Psychological Science 15 (2):75-81.
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  • How “semantic” is response priming restricted to practiced items? A reply to Abrams & Grinspan (2007)☆.Sid Kouider & Emmanuel Dupoux - 2007 - Consciousness and Cognition 16 (4):954-956.
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  • Priming of semantic classifications by novel subliminal prime words☆.Karl Christoph Klauer, Andreas B. Eder, Anthony G. Greenwald & Richard L. Abrams - 2007 - Consciousness and Cognition 16 (1):63-83.
    Four experiments demonstrate category congruency priming by subliminal prime words that were never seen as targets in a valence-classification task and a gender-classification task . In Experiment 1, overlap in terms of word fragments of one or more letters between primes and targets of different valences was larger than between primes and targets of the same valence. In Experiments 2 and 3, the sets of prime words and target words were completely disjoint in terms of used letters. In Experiment 4, (...)
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