The effect of picture priming on event-related potentials of normal and disabled readers during a word recognition memory task
- 1 December 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology
- Vol. 12 (6) , 887-903
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01688639008401029
Abstract
Normal and one subtype of disabled readers were compared in their visual event-related potentials (ERPs) that were elicited by primed and unprimed words during a recognition memory task. The primed words were preceded by a picutre having the same denotative meaning, while unprimed words were preceded by a picture having a non-associated meaning. Normal readers exhibited consistently greater amplitude than the disabled readers to umprimed words with a negative wave at 455 ms (N400). For the disabled readers, this N400 was evident, though somewhat smaller, than for controls, at fronto-central placements, but absent at the lateral parietal and occipital sites. Priming a word with a picture reduced N400 amplitude for both the normal and disabled readers. There were no remarkable differences between groups in their ERPs to the pictures. The pattern of ERP results obtained seems to reflect a failure of this subtype of disabled readers to engage long-term, semantic memory, while their short-term linguistic processing is intact.This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Event‐Related Potentials and Recognition Memory For Pictures and Words: The Effects of Intentional and Incidental LearningPsychophysiology, 1990
- An Electrophysiological Probe of Incidental Semantic AssociationJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1989
- For Distinguished Early Career Contribution to Psychophysiology: Award Address, 1985Psychophysiology, 1986
- Event-related brain potentials during initial encoding and recognition memory of congruous and incongruous wordsJournal of Memory and Language, 1986
- Event-related potentials, lexical decision and semantic primingElectroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1985
- 15 Cognitive Components of the Event-Related Brain Potential: Changes Associated with DevelopmentPublished by Elsevier ,1983
- Event-related potential studies of cerebral specialization during reading: I. Studies of normal adultsBrain and Language, 1982
- Surprise!… Surprise?Psychophysiology, 1981
- Brain potentials, perceptual mechanisms and semantic categorisationBiological Psychology, 1981
- Reading Senseless Sentences: Brain Potentials Reflect Semantic IncongruityScience, 1980