» Articles » PMID: 19203169

The Architecture of Intuition: Fluency and Affect Determine Intuitive Judgments of Semantic and Visual Coherence and Judgments of Grammaticality in Artificial Grammar Learning

Overview
Specialty Psychology
Date 2009 Feb 11
PMID 19203169
Citations 32
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

People can intuitively detect whether a word triad has a common remote associate (coherent) or does not have one (incoherent) before and independently of actually retrieving the common associate. The authors argue that semantic coherence increases the processing fluency for coherent triads and that this increased fluency triggers a brief and subtle positive affect, which is the experiential basis of these intuitions. In a series of 11 experiments with 3 different fluency manipulations (figure-ground contrast, repeated exposure, and subliminal visual priming) and 3 different affect inductions (short-timed facial feedback, subliminal facial priming, and affect-laden word triads), high fluency and positive affect independently and additively increased the probability that triads would be judged as coherent, irrespective of actual coherence. The authors could equalize and even reverse coherence judgments (i.e., incoherent triads were judged to be coherent more frequently than were coherent triads). When explicitly instructed, participants were unable to correct their judgments for the influence of affect, although they were aware of the manipulation. The impact of fluency and affect was also generalized to intuitions of visual coherence and intuitions of grammaticality in an artificial grammar learning paradigm. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).

Citing Articles

Longitudinal Associations of Experiential and Reflective Dimensions of Meaning in Life With Psychopathological Symptoms.

Anoschin A, Zurn M, Remmers C Clin Psychol Eur. 2024; 6(3):e11381.

PMID: 39678316 PMC: 11636739. DOI: 10.32872/cpe.11381.


Semantic versus perceptual priming: dissecting their impact on intuitive judgments of semantic coherence.

Sweklej J, Balas R Front Psychol. 2024; 15:1406811.

PMID: 38984271 PMC: 11231393. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1406811.


The Accumulated Clues Task (ACT): Development of a German Semantic Problem-Solving Paradigm.

Loffler C, Topolinski S J Cogn. 2023; 6(1):3.

PMID: 36698781 PMC: 9838243. DOI: 10.5334/joc.254.


Intuitive Judgments in Depression and the Role of Processing Fluency and Positive Valence: A Preregistered Replication Study.

Remmers C, Zimmermann J, Topolinski S, Richter C, Zander-Schellenberg T, Weiler M Clin Psychol Eur. 2022; 2(4):e2593.

PMID: 36398058 PMC: 9645470. DOI: 10.32872/cpe.v2i4.2593.


High fluency can improve recognition sensitivity based on learned metacognitive expectations.

Esser S, Lustig C, Haider H Front Psychol. 2022; 13:958511.

PMID: 36204736 PMC: 9530912. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.958511.