What is the priming effect?
The priming effect describes the way our brains use already-received information to help understand subsequent information. It should not be confused with the primacy effect, or primacy bias.
A common example is that when primed with the word “yellow,” we process the word “banana” more quickly than the word “television,” because we associate bananas with their color.
Teachers are often told to structure their lessons into three stages: tell the students what the lesson will be (the priming effect), teach the lesson, and then finally tell the students what they have just been taught (see the recency bias).