32 results on '"Federmeier, Kara D."'
Search Results
2. Verbal working memory predicts co-speech gesture: Evidence from individual differences
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Gillespie, Maureen, James, Ariel N., Federmeier, Kara D., and Watson, Duane G.
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- 2014
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3. Wave-ering: An ERP study of syntactic and semantic context effects on ambiguity resolution for noun/verb homographs
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Lee, Chia-Lin and Federmeier, Kara D.
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Enterprise resource planning ,Neural networks ,Neurosciences ,Enterprise resource planning ,Neural network ,Education ,Languages and linguistics ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2009.08.003 Byline: Chia-lin Lee (a), Kara D. Federmeier (a)(b)(c) Keywords: Lexical ambiguity resolution; NV-homographs; Syntactic context; ERP; Frontal negativity; N400 Abstract: Two event-related potential experiments investigated the effects of syntactic and semantic context information on the processing of noun/verb (NV) homographs (e.g., park). Experiment 1 embedded NV-homographs and matched unambiguous words in contexts that provided only syntactic cues or both syntactic and semantic constraints. Replicating prior work, when only syntactic information was available NV-homographs elicited sustained frontal negativity relative to unambiguous words. Semantic constraints eliminated this frontal ambiguity effect. Semantic constraints also reduced N400 amplitudes, but less so for homographs than unambiguous words. Experiment 2 showed that this reduced N400 facilitation was limited to cases in which the semantic context picks out a non-dominant meaning, likely reflecting the semantic mismatch between the context and residual, automatic activation of the contextually-inappropriate dominant sense. Overall, 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. Author Affiliation: (a) Department of Psychology, University of Illinois, United States (b) Neuroscience Program, University of Illinois, United States (c) The Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Illinois, United States Article History: Received 10 March 2009; Revised 22 August 2009
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- 2009
4. A beautiful day in the neighborhood: An event-related potential study of lexical relationships and prediction in context
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Laszlo, Sarah and Federmeier, Kara D.
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Education ,Languages and linguistics ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2009.06.004 Byline: Sarah Laszlo (a), Kara D. Federmeier (a)(b)(c) Keywords: Orthographic neighborhood; Sentence comprehension; ERPs; N400 Abstract: Two related questions critical to understanding the predictive processes that come online during sentence comprehension are (1) what information is included in the representation created through prediction and (2) at what functional stage does top-down, predicted information begin to affect bottom-up word processing? We investigated these questions by recording event-related potentials (ERPs) as participants read sentences that ended with expected words or with unexpected items (words, pseudowords, or illegal strings) that were either orthographically unrelated to the expected word or were one of its orthographic neighbors. The data show that, regardless of lexical status, attempts at semantic access (N400) for orthographic neighbors of expected words are facilitated relative to the processing of orthographically unrelated items. Our findings support a view of sentence processing wherein orthographically organized information is brought online by prediction and interacts with input prior to any filter on lexical status. Author Affiliation: (a) Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States (b) Program in Neuroscience, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States (c) Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States Article History: Received 13 February 2009; Revised 19 June 2009
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- 2009
5. Your favorite number is special (to you): Evidence for item-level differences in retrieval of information from numerals.
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Dickson, Danielle S. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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ARABIC numeration , *NUMERALS , *VISUAL perception , *INFORMATION processing , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *SEMANTICS - Abstract
Arabic numerals have come to be used for many purposes beyond representing a particular quantity (e.g., as a label for an athlete on their jersey), but it remains to be determined how this type of meaningfulness is accessed and utilized by readers. Motivated by previous work showing that item-level ratings of personal familiarity can influence traditional indices of memory retrieval, we recorded ERPs while participants read double-digit Arabic numerals (e.g., “65”), presented in a list, and rated whether or not each was familiar/personally meaningful. All numbers repeated after a few intervening trials. The effect of number repetition on the N400 was not impacted by subjective judgments of familiarity, suggesting that all numbers (personally meaningful or not) make initial contact with semantics, facilitating semantic access on second exposure. However, consistent with findings from prior studies of memory for letter strings and visual patterns, there was a late positivity (LPC) on second presentation, selective to numbers rated as familiar. This is the first electrophysiological evidence that readers can use Arabic numerals to guide explicit retrieval of non-numerical information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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6. Contextual constraints on lexico-semantic processing in aging: Evidence from single-word event-related brain potentials.
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Payne, Brennan R. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *LEXICOGRAPHY , *AGING , *BRAIN , *COMPREHENSION , *SEMANTIC memory - Abstract
The current study reports the effects of accumulating contextual constraints on neural indices of lexico-semantic processing (i.e., effects of word frequency and orthographic neighborhood) as a function of normal aging. Event-related brain potentials were measured from a sample of older adults as they read sentences that were semantically congruent, provided only syntactic constraints (syntactic prose), or were random word strings. A linear mixed-effects modeling approach was used to probe the effects of accumulating contextual constraints on N400 responses to individual words. Like young adults in prior work, older adults exhibited a classic word position context effect on the N400 in congruent sentences, although the magnitude of the effect was reduced in older relative to younger adults. Moreover, by modeling single-word variability in N400 responses, we observed robust effects of orthographic neighborhood density that were larger in older adults than the young, and preserved effects word frequency. Importantly, in older adults, frequency effects were not modulated by accumulating contextual constraints, unlike in the young. Collectively, these findings indicate that older adults are less likely (or able) to use accumulating top-down contextual constraints, and therefore rely more strongly on bottom-up lexical features to guide semantic access of individual words during sentence comprehension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. Event-related brain potentials reveal age-related changes in parafoveal-foveal integration during sentence processing.
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Payne, Brennan R. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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COGNITIVE Control Battery , *VISUAL perception , *SEMANTIC memory , *ADULTS , *SENTENCES (Logic) - Abstract
Normative aging is associated with deficits in visual acuity and cognitive control that impact the allocation of visual attention, but little is known about how those changes affect information extraction and integration during visual language comprehension in older adulthood. In the current study, we used a visual hemi-field flanker RSVP paradigm with event-related brain potentials to study how older readers process fine-grained aspects of semantic expectancy in parafoveal and foveal vision. Stimuli consisted of high constraint sentences with expected, unexpected but plausible, or anomalous parafoveal target words, as well as low constraint sentences with neutral but expected target words. Older adults showed graded parafoveal N400 effects that were strikingly similar to younger readers, indicating intact parafoveal semantic processing. However, whereas young adults were able to use this parafoveal pre-processing to facilitate subsequent foveal viewing, resulting in a reduced foveal N400 effect, older adults were not able to. Instead, older adults re-processed the semantics of words in foveal vision, resulting in a larger foveal N400 effect relative to the young. Collectively, our findings suggest that although parafoveal semantic processing per se is preserved in aging, there exists an age-related deficit in the ability to rapidly integrate parafoveal and foveal visual semantic representations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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8. The language of arithmetic across the hemispheres: An event-related potential investigation.
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Dickson, Danielle S. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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ARITHMETIC functions , *MULTIPLICATION , *VISUAL fields , *SENTENCES (Grammar) , *ARITHMETIC - Abstract
Arithmetic expressions, like verbal sentences, incrementally lead readers to anticipate potential appropriate completions. Existing work in the language domain has helped us understand how the two hemispheres differently participate in and contribute to the cognitive process of sentence reading, but comparatively little work has been done with mathematical equation processing. In this study, we address this gap by examining the ERP response to provided answers to simple multiplication problems, which varied both in levels of correctness (given an equation context) and in visual field of presentation (joint attention in central presentation, or biased processing to the left or right hemisphere through contralateral visual field presentation). When answers were presented to any of the visual fields (hemispheres), there was an effect of correctness prior to the traditional N400 timewindow, which we interpret as a P300 in response to a detected target item (the correct answer). In addition to this response, equation answers also elicited a late positive complex (LPC) for incorrect answers. Notably, this LPC effect was most prominent in the left visual field (right hemisphere), and it was also sensitive to the confusability of the wrong answer – incorrect answers that were closely related to the correct answer elicited a smaller LPC. This suggests a special, prolonged role for the right hemisphere during answer evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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9. The N400 reveals how personal semantics is processed: Insights into the nature and organization of self-knowledge.
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Coronel, Jason C. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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GENERAL semantics , *THEORY of self-knowledge , *LONG-term memory , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *SEMANTIC memory , *NEUROBIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
There is growing recognition that some important forms of long-term memory are difficult to classify into one of the well-studied memory subtypes. One example is personal semantics. Like the episodes that are stored as part of one's autobiography, personal semantics is linked to an individual, yet, like general semantic memory, it is detached from a specific encoding context. Access to general semantics elicits an electrophysiological response known as the N400, which has been characterized across three decades of research; surprisingly, this response has not been fully examined in the context of personal semantics. In this study, we assessed responses to congruent and incongruent statements about people's own, personal preferences. We found that access to personal preferences elicited N400 responses, with congruency effects that were similar in latency and distribution to those for general semantic statements elicited from the same participants. These results suggest that the processing of personal and general semantics share important functional and neurobiological features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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10. Hemispheric differences in orthographic and semantic processing as revealed by event-related potentials.
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Dickson, Danielle S. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *SEMANTICS , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling , *REPETITION (Aesthetics) , *VISUAL perception , *PHONOLOGY - Abstract
Differences in how the right and left hemispheres (RH, LH) apprehend visual words were examined using event-related potentials (ERPs) in a repetition paradigm with visual half-field (VF) presentation. In both hemispheres (RH/LVF, LH/RVF), initial presentation of items elicited similar and typical effects of orthographic neighborhood size, with larger N400s for orthographically regular items (words and pseudowords) than for irregular items (acronyms and meaningless illegal strings). However, hemispheric differences emerged on repetition effects. When items were repeated in the LH/RVF, orthographically regular items, relative to irregular items, elicited larger repetition effects on both the N250, a component reflecting processing at the level of visual form (orthography), and on the N400, which has been linked to semantic access. In contrast, in the RH/LVF, repetition effects were biased toward irregular items on the N250 and were similar in size across item types for the N400. The results suggest that processing in the LH is more strongly affected by wordform regularity than in the RH, either due to enhanced processing of familiar orthographic patterns or due to the fact that regular forms can be more readily mapped onto phonology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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11. Context-based facilitation of semantic access follows both logarithmic and linear functions of stimulus probability.
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Szewczyk, Jakub M. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *WORD recognition , *MACHINE learning , *LATENT semantic analysis , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
• The N400 has a graded sensitivity to word predictability even for unpredictable words. • The relationship between word predictability and N400 is both linear and logarithmic. • A Transformer-based language model (GPT-2) is a good proxy of cloze probability. Stimuli are easier to process when context makes them predictable, but does context-based facilitation arise from preactivation of a limited set of relatively probable upcoming stimuli (with facilitation then linearly related to probability) or, instead, because the system maintains and updates a probability distribution across all items (with facilitation logarithmically related to probability)? We measured the N400, an index of semantic access, to words of varying probability, including unpredictable words. Word predictability was measured using both cloze probabilities and a state-of-the-art machine learning language model (GPT-2). We reanalyzed five datasets (n = 138) to demonstrate and then replicate that context-based facilitation on the N400 is graded, even among unpredictable words. Furthermore, we established that the relationship between word predictability and context-based facilitation combines linear and logarithmic functions. We argue that this composite function reveals properties of the mapping between words and semantic features and how feature- and word-related information is activated on-line. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Dispreferred adjective orders elicit brain responses associated with lexico-semantic rather than syntactic processing
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Huang, Hsu-Wen and Federmeier, Kara D.
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BRAIN physiology , *LEXICOLOGY , *SEMANTICS , *NEUROLINGUISTICS , *COMPREHENSION testing , *ADJECTIVES (Grammar) , *WAVE analysis - Abstract
Abstract: We examined how adjective ordering is used in language comprehension by crossing order preference and concreteness in phrases consisting of two adjectives and a noun. We used both more typical phrases in which the preferred order has a concrete second adjective (“exhaustive hardback encyclopedia”) and those with a concrete first adjective in the preferred order (“heavy informative encyclopedia“). We found that concreteness-related modulations of the ERP waveform were likely responsible for prior reports of increased positivity to dispreferred orders (interpreted as a syntactic P600-like effect). When concreteness is controlled, instead, we found that dispreferred orders are associated with larger N400s to the second adjective and following noun. This suggests that dispreferred adjective orders impact lexico-semantic predictability and the ability to generate mental images of the referent but do not result in syntactic processing difficulties. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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13. Ambiguity's aftermath: How age differences in resolving lexical ambiguity affect subsequent comprehension
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Lee, Chia-lin and Federmeier, Kara D.
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AMBIGUITY , *AGE differences , *LEXICAL access , *DISEASES in older people , *SEMANTICS , *PLAUSIBILITY (Logic) , *COMPREHENSION - Abstract
Abstract: When ambiguity resolution is difficult, younger adults recruit selection-related neural resources that older adults do not. To elucidate the nature of those resources and the consequences of their recruitment for subsequent comprehension, we embedded noun/verb homographs and matched unambiguous words in syntactically well-specified but semantically neutral sentences. Target words were followed by a prepositional phrase whose head noun was plausible for only one meaning of the homograph. Replicating past findings, younger but not older adults elicited sustained frontal negativity to homographs compared to unambiguous words. On the subsequent head nouns, younger adults showed plausibility effects in all conditions, attesting to successful meaning selection through suppression. In contrast, older adults showed smaller plausibility effects following ambiguous words and failed to show plausibility effects when the context picked out the homograph''s non-dominant meaning (i.e., they did not suppress the contextually-irrelevant dominant meaning). Meaning suppression processes, reflected in the frontal negativity, thus become less available with age, with consequences for subsequent comprehension. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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14. Hemispheric differences in the recruitment of semantic processing mechanisms
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Kandhadai, Padmapriya and Federmeier, Kara D.
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CEREBRAL hemispheres , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *SEMANTICS , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *COGNITIVE processing of language , *LINGUISTIC context , *LEXICAL access - Abstract
Abstract: This study examined how the two cerebral hemispheres recruit semantic processing mechanisms by combining event-related potential measures and visual half-field methods in a word priming paradigm in which semantic strength and predictability were manipulated using lexically associated word pairs. Activation patterns on the late positive complex (LPC), linked to controlled aspects of processing, showed that previously documented left hemisphere (LH) processing benefits for word pairs with a weak forward but strong backward association stem from the ability to appreciate meaning relations in an order-independent fashion and/or strategically reorder them. Whereas there is a LH benefit for such strategic processing during comprehension in passive tasks, the present study further showed that the right hemisphere (RH) is also able to make use of these mechanisms when explicit semantic judgments are required. In both hemispheres, N400 responses, linked to initial semantic activation, were largely graded by association strength, with more amplitude reduction for forward associates and strong, symmetrically associated pairs compared to backward associates and matched weak, symmetrically associated pairs. However, responses to moderately associated pairs were more facilitated after initial presentation to the LH than to the RH. This pattern converges with sentence-processing findings that point to LH advantages for using context information to predict features of likely upcoming words. Together, the results suggest that an important basis for hemispheric asymmetries in language comprehension arises from when and how each uses top–down semantic mechanisms to shape initial semantic activation over time. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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15. Left and right memory revisited: Electrophysiological investigations of hemispheric asymmetries at retrieval
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Evans, Karen M. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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MEMORY , *BRAIN function localization , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *CEREBRAL hemispheres , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *CEREBRAL dominance - Abstract
Abstract: Hemispheric differences in the use of memory retrieval cues were examined in a continuous recognition design, using visual half-field presentation to bias the processing of test words. A speeded recognition task revealed general accuracy and response time advantages for items whose test presentation was biased to the left hemisphere. A second experiment recorded event-related brain potentials in the same design and replicated these behavioral effects, but found no electrophysiological support for the hypothesis that test words biased to the left hemisphere elicit superior recognition. Instead, successful retrieval was accompanied by memory components of identical strength regardless of test field. That robust visual field effects in response accuracy and speed were not mimicked in memory components that generally do correlate with such behavioral differences suggests that patterns in overt responses may be dominated by the left hemisphere’s superior ability to apprehend words. Differences between the data pattern observed in the present study with lateralized retrieval and that in a prior study with lateralized encoding [Evans, K. M., & Federmeier, K. D. (2007). The memory that’s right and the memory that’s left: Event-related potentials reveal hemispheric asymmetries in the encoding and retention of verbal information. Neuropsychologia 45(8), 1777–1790.] support the notion that hemispheric processing is highly integrated in the intact brain, and highlight the need to treat lateralization at different stages as distinct. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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16. Summing it up: Semantic activation processes in the two hemispheres as revealed by event-related potentials
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Kandhadai, Padmapriya and Federmeier, Kara D.
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EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *CEREBRAL hemispheres , *PRIMING (Psychology) - Abstract
Abstract: The coarse coding hypothesis suggests that semantic activation is broader in the right hemisphere, affording it an advantage over the left hemisphere for the activation of distantly related concepts or multiple meanings of lexically ambiguous words. Behavioral studies investigating coarse coding have yielded mixed results, perhaps in part because such measures sum across multiple processing stages. To more directly tap into the semantic activation processes that are the focus of the coarse coding hypothesis, the current study combined a visual half-field summation-priming paradigm with the measurement of event-related potentials (ERPs). Two primes converged onto a lateralized, unambiguous target (e.g., lion–stripes–tiger) or diverged onto different meanings of a lateralized, ambiguous target (e.g., kidney–piano–organ); in both cases, the primes were related to one another only through the target. In two experiments, participants either made lexical decisions to the targets or made a semantic-relatedness judgment between primes and target. Priming was measured as reductions in the amplitude of the N400, an ERP component that has been specifically linked to meaning activation and that showed semantic-level priming patterns in both of the tasks used in the present study. Counter to the predictions of the coarse coding hypothesis, equivalent N400 summation priming was observed for targets in the two visual fields, in both types of triplets and in both experiments. Thus, the current results fail to support the hypothesis that semantic activation patterns differ in the two hemispheres and point, instead, to other sources for observed asymmetries in verbal processing. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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17. Dividing attention influences contextual facilitation and revision during language comprehension.
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Hubbard, Ryan J. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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REVISION (Writing process) , *COMPREHENSION , *ATTENTION , *DISTRACTION , *GESTURE - Abstract
Although we often seem to successfully comprehend language in the face of distraction, few studies have examined the role of sustained attention in critical components of sentence processing, such as integrating information over a sentence and revising predictions when unexpected information is encountered. The current study investigated the impact of attention on sentence processing using a novel dual-task paradigm. Participants read weakly and strongly constraining sentences with expected or unexpected endings while also tracking the motion of dots in the background, and their EEG was recorded. Under full attention, the amplitude of the N400 component of the ERP, a measure of semantic access, was reduced (facilitated) in a graded fashion by contextual strength and fit. This context-based facilitation was attenuated when attention was divided, suggesting that sustained attention is important for building up message-level representations. In contrast, the post-N400 frontal positivity that has been observed to prediction violations and associated with revision processes was unaffected by dividing attention. However, under divided attention, participants also elicited posteriorly-distributed effects to these violations. Thus, predictive processes seem to be engaged even when attention is divided, but additional resources may then be required to process unexpected information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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18. The divided visual world paradigm: Eye tracking reveals hemispheric asymmetries in lexical ambiguity resolution
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Meyer, Aaron M. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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EYE , *VISUAL perception , *CEREBRAL hemispheres , *CEREBRAL dominance - Abstract
Abstract: Eye tracking was combined with the visual half-field procedure to examine hemispheric asymmetries in meaning selection and revision. In two experiments, gaze was monitored as participants searched a four-word array for a target that was semantically related to a lateralized ambiguous or unambiguous prime. Primes were preceded by a related or unrelated centrally-presented context word. In Experiment 1, unambiguous primes were paired with concordant weakly-related context words and strongly-related targets that were similar in associative strength to discordant subordinate-related context words and dominant-related targets in the ambiguous condition. Context words and targets were reversed in Experiment 2. A parallel study involved the measurement of event-related potentials (ERPs; Meyer, A. M., and Federmeier, K. D., 2007. The effects of context, meaning frequency, and associative strength on semantic selection: distinct contributions from each cerebral hemisphere. Brain Res. 1183, 91–108). Similar to the ERP findings, gaze revealed context effects for both visual fields/hemispheres when subordinate-related targets were presented: initial gaze revealed meaning activation when an unrelated context was utilized, whereas later gaze also revealed activation in the discordant context, indicating that meaning revision had occurred. However, eye tracking and ERP measures diverged when dominant-related targets were presented: for both visual fields/hemispheres, initial gaze indicated the presence of meaning activation in the discordant context, and, for the right hemisphere, discordant context information actually facilitated gaze relative to unrelated context information. These findings are discussed with respect to the activeness of the task and hemispheric asymmetries in the flexible use of context information. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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19. The effects of context, meaning frequency, and associative strength on semantic selection: Distinct contributions from each cerebral hemisphere
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Meyer, Aaron M. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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CEREBRAL hemispheres , *BRAIN , *CONTEXT effects (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: The visual half-field procedure was used to examine hemispheric asymmetries in meaning selection. Event-related potentials were recorded as participants decided if a lateralized ambiguous or unambiguous prime was related in meaning to a centrally presented target. Prime–target pairs were preceded by a related or unrelated centrally presented context word. To separate the effects of meaning frequency and associative strength, unambiguous words were paired with concordant weakly related context words and strongly related targets (e.g., taste–sweet–candy) that were similar in associative strength to discordant subordinate-related context words and dominant-related targets (e.g., river–bank–deposit) in the ambiguous condition. Context words and targets were reversed in a second experiment. In an unrelated (neutral) context, N400 responses were more positive than baseline (facilitated) in all ambiguous conditions except when subordinate targets were presented on left visual field–right hemisphere (LVF–RH) trials. Thus, in the absence of biasing context information, the hemispheres seem to be differentially affected by meaning frequency, with the left maintaining multiple meanings and the right selecting the dominant meaning. In the presence of discordant context information, N400 facilitation was absent in both visual fields, indicating that the contextually consistent meaning of the ambiguous word had been selected. In contrast, N400 facilitation occurred in all of the unambiguous conditions; however, the left hemisphere (LH) showed less facilitation for the weakly related target when a strongly related context was presented. These findings indicate that both hemispheres use context to guide meaning selection, but the LH is more likely to focus activation on a single, contextually relevant sense. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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20. Finding the right word: Hemispheric asymmetries in the use of sentence context information
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Wlotko, Edward W. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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CEREBRAL hemispheres , *CEREBRAL dominance , *VISUAL fields , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) - Abstract
Abstract: The cerebral hemispheres have been shown to be differentially sensitive to sentence-level information; in particular, it has been suggested that only the left hemisphere (LH) makes predictions about upcoming items, whereas the right (RH) processes words in a more integrative fashion. The current study used event-related potentials to jointly examine the effects of expectancy and sentential constraint on word processing. Expected and unexpected but plausible words matched for contextual fit were inserted into strongly and weakly constraining sentence frames and presented to the left and right visual fields (LVF and RVF). Consistent with the prediction/integration view, the P2 was sensitive to constraint: words in strongly constraining contexts elicited larger P2s than those in less predictive contexts, for RVF/LH presentation only. N400 responses for both VFs departed from the typical pattern of amplitudes graded by cloze probability. Expected endings in strongly and weakly constraining contexts were facilitated to a similar degree with RVF/LH presentation, and expected endings in weakly constraining contexts were not facilitated compared to unexpected endings in those contexts for LVF/RH presentation. These data suggest that responses seen for central presentation reflect contributions from both hemispheres. Finally, a late positivity, larger for unexpected endings in strongly constraining contexts, observed for these stimuli with central presentation was not seen here for either VF. Thus, some phenomena observed with central presentation may be an emergent property of mechanisms that require interhemispheric cooperation. These data highlight the importance of understanding hemispheric asymmetries and their implications for normal language processing. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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21. The memory that's right and the memory that's left: Event-related potentials reveal hemispheric asymmetries in the encoding and retention of verbal information
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Evans, Karen M. and Federmeier, Kara D.
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EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *VOCABULARY tests , *LANGUAGE ability testing - Abstract
Abstract: We examined the nature and timecourse of hemispheric asymmetries in verbal memory by recording event-related potentials (ERPs) in a continuous recognition task. Participants made overt recognition judgments to test words presented in central vision that were either novel (new words) or had been previously presented in the left or right visual field (old words). An ERP memory effect linked to explicit retrieval revealed no asymmetries for words repeated at short and medium retention intervals, but at longer repetition lags (20–50 intervening words) this ‘old/new effect’ was more pronounced for words whose study presentation had been biased to the right hemisphere (RH). Additionally, a repetition effect linked to more implicit recognition processes (P2 amplitude changes) was observed at all lags for words preferentially encoded by the RH but was not observed for left hemisphere (LH)-encoded words. These results are consistent with theories that the RH encodes verbal stimuli more veridically whereas the LH encodes in a more abstract manner. The current findings provide a critical link between prior work on memory asymmetries, which has emphasized general LH advantages for verbal material, and on language comprehension, which has pointed to an important role for the RH in language processes that require the retention and integration of verbal information over long time spans. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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22. Multiple priming of lexically ambiguous and unambiguous targets in the cerebral hemispheres: The coarse coding hypothesis revisited
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Kandhadai, Padmapriya and Federmeier, Kara D.
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JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *SENSES , *PSYCHOLOGY , *HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
Abstract: The coarse coding hypothesis postulates that the cerebral hemispheres differ in their breadth of semantic activation, with the left hemisphere activating a narrow, focused semantic field and the right weakly activating a broader semantic field. In support of coarse coding, studies investigating priming for multiple senses of a lexically ambiguous word have reported a right hemisphere benefit. However, studies of mediated priming have failed to find a right hemisphere advantage for processing distantly linked, unambiguous words. To address this debate, the present study made use of a multiple priming paradigm in which two primes either converged onto the single meaning of an unambiguous, lexically associated target (LION–STRIPES–TIGER) or diverged onto different meanings of an ambiguous target (KIDNEY–PIANO–ORGAN). In two experiments, participants either made lexical decisions to lateralized targets (Experiment 1) or made a semantic relatedness judgment between primes and targets (Experiment 2). In both tasks, for both ambiguous and unambiguous triplets we found equivalent priming strengths and patterns across the two visual fields, counter to the predictions of the coarse coding hypothesis. Priming patterns further suggested that both hemispheres made use of lexical level representations in the lexical decision task and semantic representations in the semantic judgment task. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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23. Multiple effects of sentential constraint on word processing
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Federmeier, Kara D., Wlotko, Edward W., De Ochoa-Dewald, Esmeralda, and Kutas, Marta
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SENTENCES (Grammar) , *WORD processing , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *CONSTRAINTS (Linguistics) - Abstract
Abstract: Behavioral and electrophysiological studies have uncovered different patterns of constraint effects on the processing of words in sentences. Whereas response time measures have indicated a reduced scope of facilitation from strongly constraining contexts, event-related brain potential (ERP) measures have instead revealed enhanced facilitation for semantically related endings in such sentences. Given this disparity, and the concomitant possibility of functionally separable stages of context effects, the current study jointly examined expectancy (cloze probability) and constraint effects on the ERP response to words. Expected and unexpected (but plausible) words completed strongly and weakly constraining sentences; unexpected items were matched for contextual fit across the two levels of constraint and were semantically unrelated to the most expected endings. N400 amplitudes were graded by expectancy but unaffected by constraint and seemed to index the benefit of contextual information. However, a later effect, in the form of increased frontal positivity from 500 to 900 ms post-stimulus-onset, indicated a possible cost associated with the processing of unexpected words in strongly constraining contexts. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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24. To mind the mind: An event-related potential study of word class and semantic ambiguity
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Lee, Chia-lin and Federmeier, Kara D.
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COMPARATIVE linguistics , *INFORMATION theory , *LANGUAGE & logic , *MEANING (Philosophy) , *BRAIN research , *NEUROCHEMISTRY , *BIOCHEMISTRY , *NEUROSCIENCES , *BRAIN chemistry , *NEUROTRANSMITTERS - Abstract
Abstract: The goal of this study was to jointly examine the effects of word class, word class ambiguity, and semantic ambiguity on the brain response to words in syntactically specified contexts. Four types of words were used: (1) word class ambiguous words with a high degree of semantic ambiguity (e.g., ‘duck’); (2) word class ambiguous words with little or no semantic ambiguity (e.g., ‘vote’); (3) word class unambiguous nouns (e.g., ‘sofa’); and (4) word class unambiguous verbs (e.g., ‘eat’). These words were embedded in minimal phrases that explicitly specified their word class: “the” for nouns (and ambiguous words used as nouns) and “to” for verbs (and ambiguous words used as verbs). Our results replicate the basic word class effects found in prior work (Federmeier, K.D., Segal, J.B., Lombrozo, T., Kutas, M., 2000. Brain responses to nouns, verbs and class ambiguous words in context. Brain, 123 (12), 2552–2566), including an enhanced N400 (250–450 ms) to nouns compared with verbs and an enhanced frontal positivity (300–700 ms) to unambiguous verbs in relation to unambiguous nouns. A sustained frontal negativity (250–900 ms) that was previously linked to word class ambiguity also appeared in this study but was specific to word class ambiguous items that also had a high level of semantic ambiguity; word class ambiguous items without semantic ambiguity, in contrast, were more positive than class unambiguous words in the early part of this time window (250–500 ms). Thus, this frontal negative effect seems to be driven by the need to resolve the semantic ambiguity that is sometimes associated with different grammatical uses of a word class ambiguous homograph rather than by the class ambiguity per se. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
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25. Learning-induced multiple synapse formation in rat cerebellar cortex
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Federmeier, Kara D., Kleim, Jeffrey A., and Greenough, William T.
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SYNAPSES , *CEREBELLUM , *MOTOR learning - Abstract
Strengthening of synaptic connections has been proposed to underlie information storage in the brain, and experience-dependent increases in synapse number have been observed. However, the effect of these new synapses on the specific connectivity, and thus function, of a given brain area remains largely unknown. We report here that motor learning specifically induces the formation of multiple synapses – two post-synaptic contacts at a single pre-synaptic varicosity – in the cerebellum. Rats undergoing motor learning had more multiple synapses (two Purkinje cell spines contacting a given parallel fiber varicosity) per Purkinje cell than did active or inactive controls. The formation of multiple synapses provides an additional connection between a given parallel fiber and Purkinje cell, thereby enhancing particular pathways, and may constitute a fundamental mechanism of neural encoding. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
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26. Picture the difference: electrophysiological investigations of picture processing in the two cerebral hemispheres
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Federmeier, Kara D. and Kutas, Marta
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MEMORY , *BRAIN - Abstract
The nature of semantic memory and the role of the two cerebral hemispheres in meaning processing were examined using event-related brain potentials (ERPs) elicited by pictures in sentences. Participants read sentence pairs ending with the lateralized presentation of three target types: (1) expected pictures, (2) unexpected pictures from the expected semantic category, and (3) unexpected pictures from an unexpected category. ERPs to contextually unexpected pictures were more negative 350–500 ms (larger N400s) than those to expected pictures in both visual fields. However, while N400s to the two types of unexpected items did not differ with left visual field presentations, they were smaller to the unexpected items from the expected category with right visual field presentations. This pattern, previously observed to words [Brain Language 62 (1998) 149], suggests general differences in how the two hemispheres use context on-line. Other aspects of the N400 response—and effects on earlier ERP components—reveal differences between pictures and words, suggesting that semantic memory access is not modality-independent. The P2 component varied with ending type for right but not left visual field presentations, suggesting that the left hemisphere may use contextual information to prepare for the visual analysis of upcoming stimuli. Furthermore, there was clear evidence for an earlier negativity (“N300”), which varied with ending type but, unlike the N400, was unaffected by visual field of presentation. Overall, the results support our hypothesis that the left hemisphere actively uses top–down information to preactivate perceptual and semantic features of upcoming stimuli, while the right hemisphere adopts a “wait and see” integrative approach. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
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27. A rose by any other name: Long-term memory structure and sentence processing.
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Federmeier, Kara D.
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- *
PROGRAMMING language semantics , *COMPUTATIONAL linguistics , *SENTENCES (Grammar) - Abstract
Examines the effects of sentencial context and semantic memory structure on on-line sentence processing. Variations in the pattern of effects; Influence of contextual information on word processing; Relationship between context and long-term memory structure; Influence of neutral organization on routine language comprehension.
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- 1999
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28. What's "left"? Hemispheric sensitivity to predictability and congruity during sentence reading by older adults.
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Federmeier, Kara D. and Kutas, Marta
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OLDER people , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *YOUNG adults - Abstract
A number of studies have found that older adults' sentence processing tends not to be characterized by the prediction-related effects attested for young adults. Here, we further probed older adults' sensitivity to predictability and congruity by recording event-related brain potentials (ERPs) as adults over age 60 read pairs of sentences, which ended with either the expected word, an unexpected word from the same semantic category, or an unexpected word from a different category. Half of the contexts were highly constraining. Consistent with patterns attested when older adults listened to these same materials (Federmeier et al., 2002), N400s, on average, were smaller to expected than to unexpected words, but did not show constraint-related reductions for unexpected words that shared features with the most predictable completion (an effect well-attested in young adults). This pattern resembles that seen in young adults for right-hemisphere-biased processing. To assess whether older adults retain young-like hemispheric asymmetries but recruit right hemisphere mechanisms more, we examined responses to the target words using visual half-field presentation. Whereas young adults show an asymmetric pattern, with prediction-related N400 amplitude reductions for left- but not right-hemisphere-initiated processing (Federmeier and Kutas, 1999b), older adults showed no reliable processing asymmetries and no evidence for prediction with left hemisphere-initiated presentation. The results suggest that left hemisphere mechanisms important for prediction during language processing are less efficacious in older adulthood. • Older adults are sensitive to plausibility during word-by-word sentence processing. • Older adults do not show reliable facilitations due to prediction. • Both hemispheres of older adults show plausibility-related effects. • Neither hemisphere of older adults shows prediction-related facilitations. • Aging changes left-hemisphere sentence processing mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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29. Alcohol and Neural Dynamics: A Meta-analysis of Acute Alcohol Effects on Event-Related Brain Potentials.
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Fairbairn, Catharine E., Kang, Dahyeon, and Federmeier, Kara D.
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EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *CENTRAL nervous system depressants , *BLOOD alcohol , *AUDITORY perception , *ALCOHOL - Abstract
An understanding of alcohol's acute neural effects could augment our knowledge of mechanisms underlying alcohol-related cognitive/motor impairment and inform interventions for addiction. Focusing on studies employing event-related brain potential methods, which offer a direct measurement of neural activity in functionally well-characterized brain networks, we present the first meta-analysis to explore acute effects of alcohol on the human brain. Databases were searched for randomized laboratory alcohol-administration trials assessing brain activity using event-related potentials. Hedges' g coefficients were pooled using 3-level random-effects meta-regression. Sixty independent randomized controlled trials met inclusion (total N = 2149). Alcohol's effects varied significantly across neural systems, with alcohol leading to reductions in event-related potential components linked with attention (P3b), g = −0.40, 95% CI (−0.50, −0.29), automatic auditory processing (mismatch negativity), g = −0.44, 95% CI (−0.66, −0.22), and performance monitoring (error-related negativity), g = −0.56, 95% CI (−0.79, −0.33). These effects were moderated by alcohol dose, emerging as significant at doses as low as 0.026% blood alcohol concentration and increasing to moderate/large at 0.12%. In contrast, irrespective of dose, relatively small or nonsignificant alcohol effects emerged in other processing domains, including those linked to executive control (N2b responses) and stimulus classification (N2c responses). Contrary to traditional conceptualizations of alcohol as a "dirty drug" with broad central nervous system depressant effects, results instead support accounts positing targeted alcohol effects in specific processing domains. By identifying alcohol effects on brain systems involved in performance monitoring and attention, results move toward the identification of mechanisms underlying alcohol-related impairment as well as factors reinforcing addiction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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30. Patterns of hemispheric asymmetry provide evidence dissociating the semantic and syntactic P600.
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Leckey, Michelle, Troyer, Melissa, and Federmeier, Kara D.
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CEREBRAL hemispheres , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *POINT processes , *COMPARATIVE grammar - Abstract
To understand how neural networks in the left (LH) and right (RH) cerebral hemispheres contribute to different aspects of language comprehension, in two experiments we measured event-related potentials (ERPs) as right-handed participants read sentences, some of which contained morphosyntactic and thematic role violations. Replicating prior work (Kuperberg et al., 2006), in Experiment 1 thematic role violations elicited both an N400 and a (semantic) P600 effect. Morphosyntactic violations elicited effects that differed as a function of participants' familial sinistrality (the presence [FS+] or absence [FS-] of a left-handed biological relative): FS+ participants showed a (syntactic) P600 effect whereas FS- participants showed a biphasic N400 and P600 response. To assess whether this difference reflects different underlying patterns of lateralization, in Experiment 2 target words were presented using visual half-field (VF) presentation. Indeed, for morphosyntactic violations, the FS- group elicited an asymmetric pattern, showing a P600 effect only with LH-biased presentation and an N400 effect in both VFs (cf. Lee and Federmeier, 2015). In contrast, FS+ participants showed a bilateral (N400-only) response pattern. This provides further evidence of FS-based differences in hemispheric contributions to syntactic processing. Strikingly, we found that, when lateralized, thematic role violations did not elicit a P600 effect, suggesting that this effect requires contributions from both hemispheres. The different response patterns for morphosyntactic and thematic role animacy violations across FS and VF also point to a processing difference in the comprehension mechanisms underlying the semantic and syntactic P600, which had heretofore been assumed to be variants of the same component. • Familial sinistrality (FS) influenced the brain's response to syntactic violations. • For FS- group, hemifield of presentation influenced processing of syntactic violations. • FS+ group showed symmetrical brain responses for syntactic/thematic violations. • Normal processing of thematic role violations seems to require both hemispheres. • Syntactic and semantic P600s have different eliciting conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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31. A “concrete view” of aging: Event related potentials reveal age-related changes in basic integrative processes in language
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Huang, Hsu-Wen, Meyer, Aaron M., and Federmeier, Kara D.
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NEUROLINGUISTICS , *AGING , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *CEREBRAL cortex , *HUMAN information processing , *LEXICON - Abstract
Abstract: Normal aging is accompanied by changes in both structural and functional cerebral organization. Although verbal knowledge seems to be relatively stable across the lifespan, there are age-related changes in the rapid use of that knowledge during on-line language processing. In particular, aging has been linked to reduce effectiveness in preparing for upcoming words and building an integrated sentence-level representation. The current study assessed whether such age-related changes extend even to much simpler language units, such as modification relations between a centrally presented adjective and a lateralized noun. Adjectives were used to elicit concrete and abstract meanings of the same, polysemous lexical items (e.g., “green book” vs. “interesting book”). Consistent with findings that lexical information is preserved with age, older adults, like younger adults, exhibited concreteness effects at the adjectives, with more negative responses to concrete adjectives over posterior (300–500ms; N400) and frontal (300–900ms) channels. However, at the noun, younger adults exhibited concreteness-based predictability effects linked to left hemisphere processing and imagery effects linked to right hemisphere processing, contingent on whether the adjectives and nouns formed a cohesive conceptual unit. In contrast, older adults showed neither effect, suggesting that they were less able to rapidly link the adjective–noun meaning to form an integrated conceptual representation. Age-related changes in language processing may thus be more pervasive than previously realized. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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32. The fate of the unexpected: Consequences of misprediction assessed using ERP repetition effects.
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Lai, Melinh K., Rommers, Joost, and Federmeier, Kara D.
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EXPLICIT memory , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *IMPLICIT memory - Abstract
• Prediction violations in sentences do not enhance incidental repetition effects. • Implicit & explicit memory signals do not vary for words that violated predictions. • Violating predictions during reading had neither beneficial nor harmful effects. • Prediction can benefit in-the-moment processing without downstream impact. Amid increasing interest in the role of prediction in language comprehension, there remains a gap in our understanding of what happens when predictions are disconfirmed. Are unexpected words harder to process and encode because of interference from the original prediction? Or, because of their relevance for learning, do expectation violations strengthen the representations of unexpected words? In two experiments, we used event-related potentials to probe the downstream consequences of prediction violations. Critical words were unexpected but plausible completions of either strongly constraining sentences, wherein they constituted a prediction violation, or weakly constraining sentences that did not afford a clear prediction. Three sentences later the critical word was repeated at the end of a different, weakly constraining sentence. In Experiment 1, repeated words elicited a reduced N400 and an enhanced late positive complex (LPC) compared to words seen for the first time. Critically, there was no effect of initial sentence constraint on the size of the repetition effect in either time window. Thus, prediction violations did not accrue either costs or benefits for later processing. Experiment 2 used the same critical items and added strongly constraining filler sentences with expected endings to further promote prediction. Again, there was no effect of initial sentence constraint on either the N400 or the LPC to repeated critical words. When taken with prior findings, the results suggest that prediction is both powerful and flexible: It can facilitate processing of predictable information by reducing encoding effort without causing processing difficulties for unexpected inputs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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