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SIMPSON, GREG B., and LORSBACH, THOMAS C. The Development of Automatic and Conscious Components of Contextual Facilitation. CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1983, 54, 760-772. 2 experiments examined the processes underlying contextual facilitation effects in second, fourth, and sixth graders and adults. In the first, subjects decided whether 2 letters were identical; in the second, they read single words aloud. Stimuli were preceded by related, unrelated, or neutral context. The first experiment varied the amount of time to process the context; the second varied the proportion of stimuli preceded by a related context. In both experiments the patterns of response latencies indicate that, for the youngest children, the facilitation for stimuli presented in a related context was attributable to an automatic activation process. The use of a second component, the conscious allocation of attention, increased with age.
Simpson et al. (Wed,) studied this question.