Retrieval and Comparison Processes in Part-Whole Decisions
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of General Psychology
- Vol. 116 (4) , 393-406
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00221309.1989.9921126
Abstract
Undergraduate students were presented with word pairs (e.g., egg-yolk) and were timed as they decided whether one word named part of the thing named by the other word. In Experiment 1, “no” responses to nonpart pairs (e.g., fish-flaps) were slowed by the similarity of the stimulus part (flaps) to a part that the stimulus object did possess (fins). This suggested that decisions were made by retrieving parts of the stimulus object from memory and comparing them to the stimulus part. Whereas the parts used as stimuli in Experiment 1 were nonspecific, belonging to several different types of object (e.g., wheel), those selected for Experiment 2 were specific to a single type of object (e.g., thumb). In Experiment 2, “no” responses to nonpart pairs (e.g., foot-thumb) were slowed by similarity of the stimulus object (foot) to an object that the stimulus part (thumb) belonged to (hand). This suggested that decisions were made by retrieving the object to which the stimulus part belonged and comparing it to the stimulus object. The results support a hybrid model of part-whole decisions that includes directed retrieval of relational knowledge from memory and a comparison process.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Relation Similarity on Part-Whole DecisionsThe Journal of General Psychology, 1988
- Relational similarity and context effects in category verification.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1986
- Semantic memory: Facts and models.Psychological Bulletin, 1986
- An experimental psychology laboratory system for the Apple II microcomputerBehavior Research Methods, 1982
- On the transitivity of the part-whole relationJournal of Linguistics, 1979
- Decision processes in verifying category membership statements: Implications for models of semantic memoryCognitive Psychology, 1979
- Comprehension of antonymy and the generality of categorization models.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1979
- A spreading-activation theory of semantic processing.Psychological Review, 1975
- Activation of Semantic MemoryThe American Journal of Psychology, 1973
- Category norms of verbal items in 56 categories A replication and extension of the Connecticut category norms.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1969