Electrophysiological Correlates of Perceptual Auditory Priming Without Explicit Recognition Memory

Author:

Harris Jill D.12,Cutmore Tim R. H.1,O’Gorman John1,Finnigan Simon3,Shum David H. K.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Applied Psychology & Behavioural Basis of Health Program, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Australia

2. Minerals Industry Safety and Health Centre, The University of Queensland, Australia

3. UQ Centre for Clinical Research, The University of Queensland, Australia

4. Behavioural Basis of Health Research Program, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Australia

Abstract

The aim of this study was to identify an event-related potential (ERP correlate) of perceptual auditory priming using a method that can dissociate it from explicit memory similar to Rugg et al. (1998) . EEG was recorded during performance of an auditory word recognition test, where 17 participants discriminated “old” from “new” aural words, encoded using either a “deep” or “shallow” levels-of-processing (LOP) study task. A right-lateralized P200 effect was modulated by words’ old/new status but not by accuracy of recognition or LOP manipulation. Because this effect was driven by simple repetition rather than factors known to influence episodic recognition memory, a “bottom-up” perceptual priming function was inferred which was substantiated by its early temporal appearance. A similar ERP amplitude modulation was evident across a broader topographical region during the subsequent N400 time interval. Conversely the late posterior component (LPC; 500–800 ms) for deeply-encoded, correctly-recognized words was of higher amplitude than LPCs for shallowly-encoded and new words, consistent with proposals that this ERP component indexes episodic memory. To our knowledge this is the first report of an ERP correlate of auditory perceptual priming dissociated from explicit episodic memory.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Physiology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,General Neuroscience

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