A revisit to interactions of stimulus quality and semantic context on N400 in visual word recognition

Author:

Xiong Rongmin1,Zhang Yong2,Hu Wenyi3,Zhu Shixue3,Huang Zhongxuan4,Wang Quanhong35

Affiliation:

1. School of Foreign Languages, Southwest University of Political Science and Law

2. College of Foreign Languages, Chongqing Medical University

3. Faculty of Psychology, Southwest University

4. School of Business, Southwest University of Political Science and Law

5. Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality (SWU), Ministry of Education (MoE), Chongqing, China

Abstract

Much behavioral research has revealed interactive effects between stimulus quality and semantic priming in visual word recognition, practically in favor of the interactive activation model. However, the limited number of event-related brain potential (ERP) studies have yielded inconsistent results considering this interaction’s impact on N400 amplitude. The current ERP study aimed to examine whether the joint effects of stimulus quality and semantic priming were specific to the lexical decision task. We used both behavioral measures and ERP recordings to evaluate the joint effects of stimulus degradation (i.e. highly vs. slightly degraded) and semantic priming (i.e. semantically related vs. unrelated) in a lexical decision task involving visual recognition of Chinese characters. The results showed significant degradation-by-priming interactions on response times and N400 amplitude (P < 0.05), with larger semantic priming effects on slightly degraded targets. These converging behavioral and electrophysiological findings provide evidence in accordance with the interactive activation models of visual word recognition, in which the early-stage visual processing (i.e. degradation) cascades into the later-stage semantic processing (i.e. priming), thus yielding interactions observed in N400 amplitude.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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