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Parafoveal and foveal N400 effects in natural reading: A timeline of semantic processing from fixation-related potentials.
Li, Nan; Wang, Suiping; Kornrumpf, Florian; Sommer, Werner; Dimigen, Olaf.
Afiliação
  • Li N; School of Foreign Studies, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, China.
  • Wang S; Philosophy and Social Science Laboratory of Reading and Development in Children and Adolescents (South China Normal University), Ministry of Education, Guangzhou, China.
  • Kornrumpf F; Center for Language Cognition and Assessment, Guangzhou, China.
  • Sommer W; Philosophy and Social Science Laboratory of Reading and Development in Children and Adolescents (South China Normal University), Ministry of Education, Guangzhou, China.
  • Dimigen O; Department of Psychology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Psychophysiology ; 61(5): e14524, 2024 May.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38297818
ABSTRACT
The depth at which parafoveal words are processed during reading is an ongoing topic of debate. Recent studies using RSVP-with-flanker paradigms have shown that implausible words within sentences elicit an N400 component while they are still in parafoveal vision, suggesting that the semantics of parafoveal words can be accessed to rapidly update the sentence representation. To study this effect in natural reading, we combined the coregistration of eye movements and EEG with the deconvolution modeling of fixation-related potentials (FRPs) to test whether semantic plausibility is processed parafoveally during Chinese sentence reading. For one target word per sentence, both its parafoveal and foveal plausibility were orthogonally manipulated using the boundary paradigm. Consistent with previous eye movement studies, we observed a delayed effect of parafoveal plausibility on fixation durations that only emerged on the foveal word. Crucially, in FRPs aligned to the pretarget fixation, a clear N400 effect emerged already based on parafoveal plausibility, with more negative voltages for implausible previews. Once participants fixated the target, we again observed an N400 effect of foveal plausibility. Interestingly, this foveal N400 was absent whenever the preview had been implausible, indicating that when a word's (im)plausibility is already processed in parafoveal vision, this information is not revised anymore upon direct fixation. Implausible words also elicited a late positive component (LPC), but exclusively when in foveal vision. Our results not only provide convergent neural and behavioral evidence for the parafoveal uptake of semantic information, but also indicate different contributions of parafoveal versus foveal information toward higher level sentence processing.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Leitura / Potenciais Evocados Limite: Humans Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Leitura / Potenciais Evocados Limite: Humans Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article