Novel Word Learning: Event-Related Brain Potentials Reflect Pure Lexical and Task-Related Effects
Fecha
2019Resumen
Previous research has pointed out that the combination of orthographic and semanticassociative training is a more advantageous strategy for the lexicalization of novel
written word-forms than their single orthographic training. However, paradigms used
previously involve explicit stimuli categorization (lexical decision), which likely influence
word learning. In the present study, we used a more automatic task (silent reading) to
determine the advantage of the associative training, by comparing the brain electrical
signals elicited in combined (orthographic and semantic) and single (only orthographic)
training conditions. In addition, the learning effect (in terms of similar neurophysiological
activity between novel and known words) was also tested under a categorization
paradigm, enabling determination of the possible influence of the training task in the
lexicalization process. Results indicated that novel words repeatedly associated with
meaningful cues showed a higher attenuation of N400 responses than those trained
in the single orthographic condition, confirming the higher facilitation in the lexicosemantic processing of these stimuli, as a consequence of semantic associations.
Moreover, only when the combined training was carried out in the reading task did
novel words show similar N400 responses to those elicited by known words, suggesting
the achievement of a similar lexical processing to known words. Crucially, when
the training is carried out under a demanding task context (lexical decision), known
words exhibited positive enhancement within the N400 time window, contributing to
maintaining N400 differences with novel trained words and confounding the outcome
of the learning. Such deflection—compatible with the modulation of the categorizationrelated P300 component—suggests that novel word learning could be influenced by the
activation of categorization-related processes. Thus, the use of low-demand tasks arises
as a more appropriate approach to study novel word learning, enabling the build-up
process of mental representations, which probably depends on