The priming of priming: Evidence that the N400 reflects context-dependent post-retrieval word integration in working memory

被引:13
|
作者
Steinhauer, Karsten [1 ,2 ]
Royle, Phaedra [2 ,3 ]
Drury, John E. [4 ]
Fromont, Lauren A. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Sch Commun Sci & Disorders, 2001 McGill Coll Ave,Unit 800, Montreal, PQ H3A 1G1, Canada
[2] Ctr Res Brain Language & Mus, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[3] Univ Montreal, Ecole Orthophonie & Audiol, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[4] SUNY Stony Brook, Dept Linguist, Stony Brook, NY 11794 USA
基金
加拿大创新基金会;
关键词
N400; Semantic priming; Context effects; List effects; Relational priming; Analogical reasoning; SEMANTIC CONTEXT; PREDICTION; COMPREHENSION; ASSOCIATION; NETWORK; ERP;
D O I
10.1016/j.neulet.2017.05.007
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Which cognitive processes are reflected by the N400 in ERPs is still controversial. Various recent articles (Lau et al., 2008; Brouwer et al., 2012) have revived the idea that only lexical pre-activation processes (such as automatic spreading activation, ASA) are strongly supported, while post-lexical integrative processes are not. Challenging this view, the present ERP study replicates a behavioral study by McKoon and Ratcliff (1995) who demonstrated that a prime-target pair such as finger hand shows stronger priming when a majority of other pairs in the list share the analogous semantic relationship (here: part-whole), even at short stimulus onset asynchronies (250 ms). We created lists with four different types of semantic relationship (synonyms, part-whole, category-member, and opposites) and compared priming for pairs in a consistent list with those in an inconsistent list as well as unrelated items. Highly significant N400 reductions were found for both relatedness priming (unrelated vs. inconsistent) and relational priming (inconsistent vs. consistent). These data are taken as strong evidence that N400 priming effects are not exclusively carried by ASA-like mechanisms during lexical retrieval but also include post-lexical integration in working memory. We link the present findings to a neurocomputational model for relational reasoning (Knowlton et al., 2012) and to recent discussions of context-dependent conceptual activations (Yee and Thompson-Schill, 2016). (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:192 / 197
页数:6
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