Rapid acquisition of novel written word-forms: ERP evidence
Date
2020Abstract
Background: Novel word acquisition is generally believed to be a rapid process, essential for ensuring a fexible and
efcient communication system; at least in spoken language, learners are able to construct memory traces for new
linguistic stimuli after just a few exposures. However, such rapid word learning has not been systematically found in
visual domain, with diferent confounding factors obscuring the orthographic learning of novel words. This study
explored the changes in human brain activity occurring online, during a brief training with novel written word-forms
using a silent reading task
Results: Single-trial, cluster-based random permutation analysis revealed that training caused an extremely fast (after
just one repetition) and stable facilitation in novel word processing, refected in the modulation of P200 and N400
components, possibly indicating rapid dynamics at early and late stages of the lexical processing. Furthermore, neural
source estimation of these efects revealed the recruitment of brain areas involved in orthographic and lexico-seman‑
tic processing, respectively.
Conclusions: These results suggest the formation of neural memory traces for novel written word-forms after a mini‑
mal exposure to them even in the absence of a semantic reference, resembling the rapid learning processes known to
occur in spoken language.