Neurophysiological correlates of top-down phonological and semantic influence during the orthographic processing of novel visual word-forms
Fecha
2020Resumen
The acquisition of new vocabulary is usually mediated by previous experience with
language. In the visual domain, the representation of orthographically unfamiliar words at the
phonological or conceptual levels may facilitate their orthographic learning. The neural correlates of
this advantage were investigated by recording EEG activity during reading novel and familiar words
across three different experiments (n = 22 each), manipulating the availability of previous knowledge
on the novel written words. A different pattern of event-related potential (ERP) responses was
found depending on the previous training, resembling cross-level top-down interactive effects during
vocabulary acquisition. Thus, whereas previous phonological experience caused a modulation at the
post-lexical stages of the visual recognition of novel written words (~520 ms), additional semantic
training influenced their processing at a lexico-semantic stage (~320 ms). Moreover, early lexical
differences (~180 ms) elicited in the absence of previous training did not emerge after both phonological
and semantic training, reflecting similar orthographic processing and word-form access.