Literature DB >> 11224913

Behavioral and electrophysiological study of phonological priming between bisyllabic spoken words.

N Dumay1, A Benraïss, B Barriol, C Colin, M Radeau, M Besson.   

Abstract

Phonological priming between bisyllabic (CV.CVC) spoken items was examined using both behavioral (reaction times, RTs) and electrophysiological (event-related potentials, ERPs) measures. Word and pseudoword targets were preceded by pseudoword primes. Different types of final phonological overlap between prime and target were compared. Critical pairs shared the last syllable, the rime or the coda, while unrelated pairs were used as controls. Participants performed a target shadowing task in Experiment 1 and a delayed lexical decision task in Experiment 2. RTs were measured in the first experiment and ERPs were recorded in the second experiment. The RT experiment was carried out under two presentation conditions. In Condition 1 both primes and targets were presented auditorily, while in Condition 2 the primes were presented visually and the targets auditorily. Priming effects were found in the unimodal condition only. RTs were fastest for syllable overlap, intermediate for rime overlap, and slowest for coda overlap and controls that did not differ from one another. ERPs were recorded under unimodal auditory presentation. ERP results showed that the amplitude of the auditory N400 component was smallest for syllable overlap, intermediate for rime overlap, and largest for coda overlap and controls that did not differ from one another. In both experiments, the priming effects were larger for word than for pseudoword targets. These results are best explained by the combined influences of nonlexical and lexical processes, and a comparison of the reported effects with those found in monosyllables suggests the involvement of rime and syllable representations.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11224913     DOI: 10.1162/089892901564117

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci        ISSN: 0898-929X            Impact factor:   3.225


  24 in total

1.  Bias effects in facilitatory phonological priming.

Authors:  Dennis Norris; James M McQueen; Anne Cutler
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2002-04

2.  Lexical competition in phonological priming: assessing the role of phonological match and mismatch lengths between primes and targets.

Authors:  Sophie Dufour; Ronald Peereman
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2003-12

3.  Lexical selection differences between monolingual and bilingual listeners.

Authors:  Deanna C Friesen; Ashley Chung-Fat-Yim; Ellen Bialystok
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2015-12-09       Impact factor: 2.381

4.  Analysis of a Chinese phonetic compound database: implications for orthographic processing.

Authors:  Janet Hui-wen Hsiao; Richard Shillcock
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2006-09

5.  Cleaving automatic processes from strategic biases in phonological priming.

Authors:  James M McQueen; Joan Sereno
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2005-10

6.  Competition effects in phonological priming: the role of mismatch position between primes and targets.

Authors:  Sophie Dufour; Ronald Peereman
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2009-03-17

7.  Investigating the time course of spoken word recognition: electrophysiological evidence for the influences of phonological similarity.

Authors:  Amy S Desroches; Randy Lynn Newman; Marc F Joanisse
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 3.225

8.  On the locus of talker-specificity effects in spoken word recognition: an ERP study with dichotic priming.

Authors:  Sophie Dufour; Dierdre Bolger; Stephanie Massol; Phillip J Holcomb; Jonathan Grainger
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2017-06-08       Impact factor: 2.331

9.  An Event-Related Potential Study of Cross-modal Morphological and Phonological Priming.

Authors:  Timothy Justus; Jennifer Yang; Jary Larsen; Paul de Mornay Davies; Diane Swick
Journal:  J Neurolinguistics       Date:  2009-11-01       Impact factor: 1.710

10.  Effects of rhyme and spelling patterns on auditory word ERPs depend on selective attention to phonology.

Authors:  Yuliya N Yoncheva; Urs Maurer; Jason D Zevin; Bruce D McCandliss
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2013-02-09       Impact factor: 2.381

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