Cognition | 2019

Contextual priming of word meanings is stabilized over sleep

 
 
 

Abstract


Evidence is growing for the involvement of consolidation processes in the learning and retention of language, largely based on instances of new linguistic components (e.g., new words). Here, we assessed whether consolidation effects extend to the semantic processing of highly familiar words. The experiments were based on the word-meaning priming paradigm in which a homophone is encountered in a context that biases interpretation towards the subordinate meaning. The homophone is subsequently used in a word-association test to determine whether the priming encounter facilitates the retrieval of the primed meaning. In Experiment 1 (N\u202f=\u202f74), we tested the resilience of priming over periods of 2 and 12\u202fh that were spent awake or asleep, and found that sleep periods were associated with stronger subsequent priming effects. In Experiment 2 (N\u202f=\u202f55) we tested whether the sleep benefit could be explained in terms of a lack of retroactive interference by testing participants 24\u202fh after priming. Participants who had the priming encounter in the evening showed stronger priming effects after 24\u202fh than participants primed in the morning, suggesting that sleep makes priming resistant to interference during the following day awake. The results suggest that consolidation effects can be found even for highly familiar linguistic materials. We interpret these findings in terms of a contextual binding account in which all language perception provides a learning opportunity, with sleep and consolidation contributing to the updating of our expectations, ready for the next day.

Volume 182
Pages 109-126
DOI 10.1016/j.cognition.2018.09.007
Language English
Journal Cognition

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