An event-related potential study of cross-modal morphological and phonological priming
Autor: | Diane Swick, Paul de Mornay Davies, Jary Larsen, Jennifer Yang, Timothy Justus |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Response priming
Linguistics and Language Cognitive Neuroscience 05 social sciences Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Verb Cognition Article 050105 experimental psychology N400 Linguistics 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) Event-related potential 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Psychology Control (linguistics) Priming (psychology) 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Regular and irregular verbs Cognitive psychology |
Zdroj: | Journal of Neurolinguistics. 22:584-604 |
ISSN: | 0911-6044 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2009.07.001 |
Popis: | The current work investigated whether differences in phonological overlap between the past- and present-tense forms of regular and irregular verbs can account for the graded neurophysiological effects of verb regularity observed in past-tense priming designs. Event-related potentials were recorded from 16 healthy participants who performed a lexical-decision task in which past-tense primes immediately preceded present-tense targets. To minimize intra-modal phonological priming effects, cross-modal presentation between auditory primes and visual targets was employed, and results were compared to a companion intra-modal auditory study (Justus, T., Larsen, J., de Mornay Davies, P., Swick, D. (2008). Interpreting dissociations between regular and irregular past-tense morphology: evidence from event-related potentials. Cognitive, Affective, Behavioral Neuroscience, 8, 178–194.). For both regular and irregular verbs, faster response times and reduced N400 components were observed for present-tense forms when primed by the corresponding past-tense forms. Although behavioral facilitation was observed with a pseudopast phonological control condition, neither this condition nor an orthographic-phonological control produced significant N400 priming effects. Instead, these two types of priming were associated with a post-lexical anterior negativity (PLAN). Results are discussed with regard to dual- and single-system theories of inflectional morphology, as well as intra- and cross-modal prelexical priming. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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