Frequency and predictability effects on event-related potentials during reading.

Brain Res

Helmholtz Center for the Study of Mind and Brain Dynamics, Department of Psychology, University of Potsdam, P.O. Box 60 15 53, 14451 Potsdam, Germany.

Published: April 2006

Effects of frequency, predictability, and position of words on event-related potentials were assessed during word-by-word sentence reading in 48 subjects in an early and in a late time window corresponding to P200 and N400. Repeated measures multiple regression analyses revealed a P200 effect in the high-frequency range; also the P200 was larger on words at the beginning and end of sentences than on words in the middle of sentences (i.e., a quadratic effect of word position). Predictability strongly affected the N400 component; the effect was stronger for low than for high-frequency words. The P200 frequency effect indicates that high-frequency words are lexically accessed very fast, independent of context information. Effects on the N400 suggest that predictability strongly moderates the late access especially of low-frequency words. Thus, contextual facilitation on the N400 appears to reflect both lexical and post-lexical stages of word recognition, questioning a strict classification into lexical and post-lexical processes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2006.02.010DOI Listing

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