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Event-related brain potentials evoked by verbs and nouns in a primed lexical decision task

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2001

FRANK RÖSLER
Affiliation:
Experimental and Biological Psychology, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany
JUDITH STREB
Affiliation:
Experimental and Biological Psychology, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany
HUBERTUS HAAN
Affiliation:
Experimental and Biological Psychology, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany
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Abstract

We investigated whether verbs and nouns evoke comparable behavioral and N400 effects in a primed lexical decision task. Twenty-nine students were tested, 13 in a pilot study in which only response times and error rates were collected and 16 in a study in which ERPs were recorded from 124 scalp electrodes. Stimuli were noun–noun and verb–verb pairs with the targets bearing either a strong, a moderate, or no semantic association to the prime or being a pseudoword. Behavioral data revealed comparable priming effects for both word categories. These proved to be independent from the SOA (250 and 800 ms) and they followed the well-known pattern of decreasing response times and error rates with increasing relatedness between target and prime. ERPs revealed pronounced N400 effects for both word categories with a larger amplitude for noun than for verb pairs. A systematic analysis of topographic differences between noun- and verb-evoked ERPs and N400 effects, respectively, gave no convincing support to the hypothesis that the two word categories activate distinct neuronal networks.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2001 Society for Psychophysiological Research

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