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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Influence of Hierarchical Masks on Masked Repetition Priming: Evidence From Event-Related Potential Investigation
Ying MeiYing MeiYing MeiYing MeiYuqian DaiYuqian DaiYuqian DaiYi LeiYi LeiYi Leisubject
Repetition primingAffect (psychology)conceptual hierarchical relationship050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesFluencyBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineSimilarity (network science)Event-related potential0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesfluencylcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryBiological PsychiatryOriginal ResearchfamiliarityRepetition (rhetorical device)05 social sciencesCognitionP2FN400Psychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurologyrecognitionPsychologyPriming (psychology)030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceCognitive psychologydescription
The discussion about relationship between prime and target has contributed to the mechanism of priming effect and object recognition. Nevertheless, the role of relationship between mask and target in those cognitive processes remains unquestioned. In the present study, we aim to investigate how mask-target hierarchical relationship may affect word priming and familiarity, by using the masked repetition paradigm and manipulating three hierarchical relationship between mask and target. It is hypothesized that a closer hierarchical relationship between mask and target is associated with a higher mask target similarity, and thereby it leads to a worse recognition performance. Our behavioral results do not support this hypothesis by showing no effect of mask target hierarchical relationship on response time (RT) and accuracy. Event-related potentials (ERPs) indicated that highly similar mask-target triggered (i.e., the subordinate-subordinate-subordinate trials) larger N1 amplitudes, suggesting that it requires more cognitive resource to discriminate the stimuli. In addition, trials with highly similar mask-target hierarchical relationship induced smaller P2 (150–250 ms) and larger mid-frontal FN400 amplitudes than do trials with low mask-target similarity (i.e., the subordinate-basic-subordinate and the subordinate-superordinate-subordinate trials). Our results suggested that the similarity between mask and target may impede conceptual fluency to reduce word priming and familiarity effect.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-03-06 | Frontiers in Human Neuroscience |