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Hemispheric sensitivities to lexical and contextual information: evidence from lexical ambiguity resolution.
Brain Lang. 2008 May; 105(2):71-82.BL

Abstract

The present study examined the manner in which both hemispheres utilize prior semantic context and relative meaning frequency during the processing of homographs. Participants read sentences biased toward the dominant or the subordinate meaning of their final homograph, or unbiased neutral sentences, and performed a lexical decision task on lateralized targets presented 250ms after the onset of the sentence-final ambiguous prime. Targets were either related to the dominant or the subordinate meaning of the preceding homograph, or unrelated to it. Performance asymmetry was found in the absence of a biasing context: dominant-related targets were exclusively facilitated in the RVF/LH, whereas both dominant- and subordinate-related targets were facilitated in the LVF/RH. Performance symmetry was found in the presence of a biasing context: dominant-related targets were exclusively activated in dominant-biasing contexts, whereas both dominant- and subordinate-related targets were facilitated in subordinate-biasing contexts. The implications of the results for both general and hemispheric models of word processing are discussed.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute of Information Processing and Decision Making, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel. opeleg@research.haifa.ac.ilNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

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

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17976714

Citation

Peleg, Orna, and Zohar Eviatar. "Hemispheric Sensitivities to Lexical and Contextual Information: Evidence From Lexical Ambiguity Resolution." Brain and Language, vol. 105, no. 2, 2008, pp. 71-82.
Peleg O, Eviatar Z. Hemispheric sensitivities to lexical and contextual information: evidence from lexical ambiguity resolution. Brain Lang. 2008;105(2):71-82.
Peleg, O., & Eviatar, Z. (2008). Hemispheric sensitivities to lexical and contextual information: evidence from lexical ambiguity resolution. Brain and Language, 105(2), 71-82.
Peleg O, Eviatar Z. Hemispheric Sensitivities to Lexical and Contextual Information: Evidence From Lexical Ambiguity Resolution. Brain Lang. 2008;105(2):71-82. PubMed PMID: 17976714.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Hemispheric sensitivities to lexical and contextual information: evidence from lexical ambiguity resolution. AU - Peleg,Orna, AU - Eviatar,Zohar, Y1 - 2007/10/31/ PY - 2007/01/22/received PY - 2007/09/23/revised PY - 2007/09/26/accepted PY - 2007/11/3/pubmed PY - 2008/12/17/medline PY - 2007/11/3/entrez SP - 71 EP - 82 JF - Brain and language JO - Brain Lang VL - 105 IS - 2 N2 - The present study examined the manner in which both hemispheres utilize prior semantic context and relative meaning frequency during the processing of homographs. Participants read sentences biased toward the dominant or the subordinate meaning of their final homograph, or unbiased neutral sentences, and performed a lexical decision task on lateralized targets presented 250ms after the onset of the sentence-final ambiguous prime. Targets were either related to the dominant or the subordinate meaning of the preceding homograph, or unrelated to it. Performance asymmetry was found in the absence of a biasing context: dominant-related targets were exclusively facilitated in the RVF/LH, whereas both dominant- and subordinate-related targets were facilitated in the LVF/RH. Performance symmetry was found in the presence of a biasing context: dominant-related targets were exclusively activated in dominant-biasing contexts, whereas both dominant- and subordinate-related targets were facilitated in subordinate-biasing contexts. The implications of the results for both general and hemispheric models of word processing are discussed. SN - 1090-2155 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17976714/Hemispheric_sensitivities_to_lexical_and_contextual_information:_evidence_from_lexical_ambiguity_resolution_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -