scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Never seem to find the time: evaluating the physiological time course of visual word recognition with regression analysis of single-item event-related potentials

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This article examined the time course of influence of variables ranging from relatively perceptual (e.g., bigram frequency) to relatively semantic on ERP responses, analysed at the single-item level.
Abstract
Visual word recognition is a process that, both hierarchically and in parallel, draws on different types of information ranging from perceptual to orthographic to semantic. A central question concerns when and how these different types of information come online and interact after a word form is initially perceived. Numerous studies addressing aspects of this question have been conducted with a variety of techniques [e.g., behaviour, eye-tracking, event-related potentials (ERPs)], and divergent theoretical models, suggesting different overall speeds of word processing, have coalesced around clusters of mostly method-specific results. Here, we examine the time course of influence of variables ranging from relatively perceptual (e.g., bigram frequency) to relatively semantic (e.g., the number of lexical associates) on ERP responses, analysed at the single-item level. Our results, in combination with a critical review of the literature, suggest methodological, analytic and theoretical factors that may have led to inconsistency in results of past studies; we will argue that consideration of these factors may lead to a reconciliation between divergent views of the speed of word recognition.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Time Course of Visual Word Recognition: An Event-related Potential Investigation using Masked Repetition Priming

TL;DR: A strong modulation of the N400 and three earlier ERP components (P150, N250, and the P325) that the authors propose reflect sequential overlapping steps in the processing of printed words are shown.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brainprint: Assessing the uniqueness, collectability, and permanence of a novel method for ERP biometrics

TL;DR: There are robustly identifiable features of the ERP that enable labeling of ERPs as belonging to individuals with accuracy reliably above chance, and these features are stable over time, as indicated by continued accurate identification of individuals from ERPs after a lag of up to six months.
Journal ArticleDOI

CEREBRE: A Novel Method for Very High Accuracy Event-Related Potential Biometric Identification

TL;DR: It is argued that the averaged event-related potential (ERP) may provide the potential for more accurate biometric identification, as its elicitation allows for some control over the cognitive state of the user to be obtained through the design of the challenge protocol.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regression-based estimation of ERP waveforms: I. The rERP framework.

TL;DR: The regression-based rERP framework is introduced, which extends ERP averaging to handle arbitrary combinations of categorical and continuous covariates, partial confounding, nonlinear effects, and overlapping responses to distinct events, all within a single unified system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revisiting the incremental effects of context on word processing: Evidence from single‐word event‐related brain potentials

TL;DR: Modelling word-level variability in ERPs reveals mechanisms by which different sources of information simultaneously contribute to the unfolding neural dynamics of comprehension, as well as probing the continuous and incremental effects of semantic and syntactic context on multiple aspects of lexical processing during sentence comprehension.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Differences in brain potentials to open and closed class words: class and frequency effects.

TL;DR: It is suggested that neither N400 nor the left anterior negativity distinguish qualitatively between the two word classes and thus claims about different brain systems involved in the processing of open and closed class words are not substantiated electrophysiologically.
Journal ArticleDOI

A magnetoencephalographic component whose latency reflects lexical frequency.

TL;DR: This study identifies an MEG component (the M350) whose latency mirrors the frequency-effect and identifies a neural component whose latency predicts reaction time has not been discovered.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the time course of letter perception: a masked priming ERP investigation.

TL;DR: It is argued that these ERP results reflect processing in a hierarchical system for letter recognition that involves both case-specific and case-independent representations of alphabetic stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of stimulus font and size on masked repetition priming: An event-related potentials (ERP) investigation.

TL;DR: The results confirm the interpretation of the N/P150 as a component sensitive to feature-level processing, and suggest that the type of prelexical and lexical processing reflected in the N250, P325, and N400 components is performed on representations that are invariant to changes in both font and size.
Journal ArticleDOI

The time-course of single-word reading: Evidence from fast behavioral and brain responses

TL;DR: In this paper, a multimodal approach combining fast behavioral measures, ERPs and EEG/MEG source estimation was used to study the earliest lexical and semantic information retrieval in visual word recognition.
Related Papers (5)