Distinct mechanisms underlying cross-modal semantic conflict and response conflict processing

Author:

Xu Honghui123,Yang Guochun45,Wu Haiyan3,Xiao Jing67,Li Qi67,Liu Xun12

Affiliation:

1. CAS Key Laboratory of Behavioral Science, Institute of Psychology , Beijing 100101 , China

2. Department of Psychology, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100040 , China

3. Center for Cognitive and Brain Sciences and Department of Psychology, University of Macau , Taipa, Macau 999078 , China

4. Cognitive Control Collaborative, University of Iowa , Iowa City, IA 52242 , United States

5. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Iowa , Iowa City, IA 52242 , United States

6. Beijing Key Laboratory of Learning and Cognition , School of Psychology, , Beijing 100089 , China

7. Capital Normal University , School of Psychology, , Beijing 100089 , China

Abstract

Abstract Interference from task-irrelevant stimuli can occur during the semantic and response processing stages. Previous studies have shown both common and distinct mechanisms underlying semantic conflict processing and response conflict processing in the visual domain. However, it remains unclear whether common and/or distinct mechanisms are involved in semantic conflict processing and response conflict processing in the cross-modal domain. Therefore, the present electroencephalography study adopted an audiovisual 2-1 mapping Stroop task to investigate whether common and/or distinct mechanisms underlie semantic conflict and response conflict. Behaviorally, significant cross-modal semantic conflict and significant cross-modal response conflict were observed. Electroencephalography results revealed that the frontal N2 amplitude and theta power increased only in the semantic conflict condition, while the parietal N450 amplitude increased only in the response conflict condition. These findings indicated that distinct neural mechanisms were involved in cross-modal semantic conflict and response conflict processing, supporting the domain-specific cognitive control mechanisms from a cross-modal multistage conflict processing perspective.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Open Research Fund of the CAS Key Laboratory of Behavioral Science

Institute of Psychology

Key Project of Beijing Education Science Planning

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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