Literature DB >> 19037658

Does familiarity or conflict account for performance in the word-stem completion task? Evidence from behavioural and event-related-potential data.

Florian Klonek1, Sascha Tamm, Markus J Hofmann, Arthur M Jacobs.   

Abstract

The conflict monitoring theory (CMT) assumes that word-stems associated with several completions should lead to crosstalk and conflict due to underdetermined responding situation (Botvinick et al. in Psychol Rev 108(3):624-652, 2001). In contrast, the Multiple-Read-Out-Model (MROM) of Jacobs and Grainger (J Exp Psychol 20(6): 1311-1334, 1994) predicts a high level of general lexical activity (GLA) for word-stems with many completions, indicating a higher stimulus familiarity because these stems are more probable to be read. We compared word-stems with several completions against word-stems with one possible completion while measuring response times and electrophysiological recordings. Slowest response times and a distinct FN400 component, which has previously been related to the concept of familiarity (Curran in Memory Cogn 28(6):923-938, 2000), were apparent for word-stems that could only be associated with a single response. These findings support the claims of the MROM. Furthermore, the lack of the N2-component for word-stems with several completions continues to challenge the EEG-extension of the CMT (Yeung et al. in Psychol Rev 111(4):2004).

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 19037658     DOI: 10.1007/s00426-008-0189-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Res        ISSN: 0340-0727


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