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Evaluative priming in a semantic flanker task: ERP evidence for a mutual facilitation explanation. | LitMetric

Evaluative priming in a semantic flanker task: ERP evidence for a mutual facilitation explanation.

Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci

Faculty of Behavioral Sciences, Department of Psychology, Saarland University, Campus A2 4, 66123, Saarbrücken, Germany,

Published: March 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Semantic flanker tasks show that the response times for categorizing targets are influenced by how closely related the flankers are in terms of their meaning and evaluative valence.
  • Researchers examined how positive and negative associations between flankers and targets affect this "flanker effect," hypothesizing that concepts that share evaluative congruency enhance each other's activation.
  • Results confirmed that when flankers and targets are evaluatively congruent, they either help or hinder the processing of the target, as shown by both behavioral data and brain activity measurements, suggesting significant implications for understanding how we represent and process evaluative meanings.

Article Abstract

In semantic flanker tasks, target categorization response times are affected by the semantic compatibility of the flanker and target. With positive and negative category exemplars, we investigated the influence of evaluative congruency (whether flanker and target share evaluative valence) on the flanker effect, using behavioral and electrophysiological measures. We hypothesized a moderation of the flanker effect by evaluative congruency on the basis of the assumption that evaluatively congruent concepts mutually facilitate each other's activation (see Schmitz & Wentura in Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 38:984-1000, 2012). Applying an onset delay of 50 ms for the flanker, we aimed to decrease the facilitative effect of an evaluatively congruent flanker on target encoding and, at the same time, increase the facilitative effect of an evaluatively congruent target on flanker encoding. As a consequence of increased flanker activation in the case of evaluative congruency, we expected a semantically incompatible flanker to interfere with the target categorization to a larger extent (as compared with an evaluatively incongruent pairing). Confirming our hypotheses, the flanker effect significantly depended on evaluative congruency, in both mean response times and N2 mean amplitudes. Thus, the present study provided behavioral and electrophysiological evidence for the mutual facilitation of evaluatively congruent concepts. Implications for the representation of evaluative connotations of semantic concepts are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13415-013-0206-2DOI Listing

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