2019
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/5q4uh
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Sound-symbolism effects in the absence of awareness. A replication study

Abstract: People have been shown to link particular sounds with particular shapes. For instance, the round-sounding non-word bouba tends to be associated with curved shapes, whereas the sharp-sounding non-word kiki is deemed to be related to angular shapes. This tendency of people to associate sounds and shapes has been observed across different languages. In the present study, we re-examined the claim of Hung, Styles, and Hsieh (2017) that such sound-shape mappings can occur before becoming aware of the visual stimuli.… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Striking recent work (Hung, Styles, & Hsieh, 2017) suggests that these mappings may have an unconscious basis, such that participants can compute the fit between a word's sound and an object's shape when both are masked from awareness. This surprising finding replicated in the pre-registered report by Heyman, Maerten, Vankrunkelsven, Voorspoels and Moors (2019), with potentially far-reaching implications for the role of awareness in language processing (Hassin, 2013;Rabagliati, Robertson, & Carmel, 2018). However, as I demonstrate, it is an artifact of the stimuli used.…”
mentioning
confidence: 52%
“…Striking recent work (Hung, Styles, & Hsieh, 2017) suggests that these mappings may have an unconscious basis, such that participants can compute the fit between a word's sound and an object's shape when both are masked from awareness. This surprising finding replicated in the pre-registered report by Heyman, Maerten, Vankrunkelsven, Voorspoels and Moors (2019), with potentially far-reaching implications for the role of awareness in language processing (Hassin, 2013;Rabagliati, Robertson, & Carmel, 2018). However, as I demonstrate, it is an artifact of the stimuli used.…”
mentioning
confidence: 52%
“…All code used in the present analyses has been made publicly available via OSF and can be accessed at https:// osf.io/tva8j/. Data used in the analyses were from the study by Heyman, Maerten, Vankrunkelsven, Voorspoels, and Moors (2019) and can be found at https://osf.io/ kqwcg/. The design and analysis plans for the present study were not preregistered.…”
Section: Declaration Of Conflicting Interestsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One eye is shown a rapidly changing pattern that dominates awareness and can mask the stimulus that is shown to the other eye, which in this paradigm is either a puffy or a spiky shape with either the words kiki or bubu printed inside. When the pronunciation of the word mismatched the shape of the image, both the original study (Hung et al, 2017) and the replication study (Heyman et al, 2019) found that stimuli were suppressed from awareness for longer (i.e., breakthrough times were longer for incongruent stimuli).…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
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