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

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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.

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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.
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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.
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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
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An ERP study of category priming: evidence of early lexical semantic access.

TL;DR: The findings of an early lexicality effect at 100 ms and of semantic access by 168 ms is in accordance with results of recent ERP and eye movement studies.
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Synchronizing timelines: Relations between fixation durations and N400 amplitudes during sentence reading

TL;DR: This paper examined relations between eye movements (single-fixation durations) and RSVP-based event-related potentials (ERPs; N400s) recorded during reading the same sentences in two independent experiments.
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Wave-ering: An ERP study of syntactic and semantic context effects on ambiguity resolution for noun/verb homographs

TL;DR: The findings suggest that ambiguity resolution in context involves the interplay between multiple neural networks, some involving more automatic semantic processing mechanisms and others involving top-down control mechanisms.
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Stimulus onset asynchrony and the timeline of word recognition : event-related potentials during sentence reading

TL;DR: The results point to a special role of a near-normal presentation rate for visual word recognition and therefore suggest that SOA should be taken into account in research of natural reading.
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