ABSTRACT: A "response window" technique is described and used to reliably
demonstrate unconscious activation of meaning by subliminal (visually masked)
words. Visually masked prime words were shown to influence judged meaning of following
target words. This priming-effect marker was used to identify 2 additional markers
of unconscious semantic activation: (1) the activation is very short-lived (the
target word must occur within about 100 milliseconds of the subliminal prime);
and (2) unlike supraliminal prime-target pairs, a subliminal pair leaves no memory
trace that can be observed in response to the next prime-target pair. Thus, unconscious
semantic activation is shown to be a readily reproducible phenomenon but also
very limited in the duration of its effect.