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ERP correlates of the bilateral redundancy gain for words.
Neuropsychologia. 2007 May 15; 45(9):2114-24.N

Abstract

Neurophysiological correlates of hemispheric asymmetry and interhemispheric interaction in lexical processing were investigated in a lexical decision task with tachistoscopic stimulus presentation either unilaterally, to the right or left visual field, or bilaterally, with identical stimulus copies to each visual hemi-field. Behavioral data confirmed both right visual field advantage and bilateral redundancy gain for words but not for pronounceable orthographically regular pseudowords. ERPs showed a significant amplitude increase 160-200 after stimulus presentation specifically for words after bilateral redundant stimulation, which was present in the recordings from both hemispheres. Localization of cortical sources using minimum norm estimation indicated stronger cortical activity for words in temporal regions of both hemispheres after bilateral presentation compared with each of the unilateral stimulation conditions individually. Pseudoword presentation did not lead to a general increase of cortical activation in the bilateral condition compared with unilateral presentation. The specific activation increase for words in the bilateral redundant condition relative to unilateral stimulation and the absence of this effect for pseudowords, which became manifest in a significant interaction of the factors lexicality and presentation mode, is best explained by summation of neuronal activation from both hemispheres within distributed lexical circuits. Source estimation indicates that temporal areas, particularly in the left hemisphere, are the primary cortical loci where such stimulus-specific activity increases occurred.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Medical Research Council, Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK. bettina.mohr@mrc-cbu.cam.ac.ukNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17336345

Citation

Mohr, Bettina, et al. "ERP Correlates of the Bilateral Redundancy Gain for Words." Neuropsychologia, vol. 45, no. 9, 2007, pp. 2114-24.
Mohr B, Endrass T, Hauk O, et al. ERP correlates of the bilateral redundancy gain for words. Neuropsychologia. 2007;45(9):2114-24.
Mohr, B., Endrass, T., Hauk, O., & Pulvermüller, F. (2007). ERP correlates of the bilateral redundancy gain for words. Neuropsychologia, 45(9), 2114-24.
Mohr B, et al. ERP Correlates of the Bilateral Redundancy Gain for Words. Neuropsychologia. 2007 May 15;45(9):2114-24. PubMed PMID: 17336345.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - ERP correlates of the bilateral redundancy gain for words. AU - Mohr,Bettina, AU - Endrass,Tanja, AU - Hauk,Olaf, AU - Pulvermüller,Friedemann, Y1 - 2007/01/30/ PY - 2005/12/06/received PY - 2007/01/16/revised PY - 2007/01/21/accepted PY - 2007/3/6/pubmed PY - 2007/7/19/medline PY - 2007/3/6/entrez SP - 2114 EP - 24 JF - Neuropsychologia JO - Neuropsychologia VL - 45 IS - 9 N2 - Neurophysiological correlates of hemispheric asymmetry and interhemispheric interaction in lexical processing were investigated in a lexical decision task with tachistoscopic stimulus presentation either unilaterally, to the right or left visual field, or bilaterally, with identical stimulus copies to each visual hemi-field. Behavioral data confirmed both right visual field advantage and bilateral redundancy gain for words but not for pronounceable orthographically regular pseudowords. ERPs showed a significant amplitude increase 160-200 after stimulus presentation specifically for words after bilateral redundant stimulation, which was present in the recordings from both hemispheres. Localization of cortical sources using minimum norm estimation indicated stronger cortical activity for words in temporal regions of both hemispheres after bilateral presentation compared with each of the unilateral stimulation conditions individually. Pseudoword presentation did not lead to a general increase of cortical activation in the bilateral condition compared with unilateral presentation. The specific activation increase for words in the bilateral redundant condition relative to unilateral stimulation and the absence of this effect for pseudowords, which became manifest in a significant interaction of the factors lexicality and presentation mode, is best explained by summation of neuronal activation from both hemispheres within distributed lexical circuits. Source estimation indicates that temporal areas, particularly in the left hemisphere, are the primary cortical loci where such stimulus-specific activity increases occurred. SN - 0028-3932 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17336345/ERP_correlates_of_the_bilateral_redundancy_gain_for_words_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0028-3932(07)00049-8 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -