Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6264098 Brain Research 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Rhyme processing is reflected in the electrophysiological signals of the brain as a negative deflection for non-rhyming as compared to rhyming stimuli around 450 ms after stimulus onset. Studies have shown that this N450 component is not solely sensitive to rhyme but also responds to other types of phonological overlap. In the present study, we examined whether the N450 component can be used to gain insight into the global similarity effect, indicating that rhyme judgment skills decrease when participants are presented with word pairs that share a phonological overlap but do not rhyme (e.g., bell-ball). We presented 20 adults with auditory rhyming, globally similar overlapping and unrelated word pairs. In addition to measuring behavioral responses by means of a yes/no button press, we also took EEG measures. The behavioral data showed a clear global similarity effect; participants judged overlapping pairs more slowly than unrelated pairs. However, the neural outcomes did not provide evidence that the N450 effect responds differentially to globally similar and unrelated word pairs, suggesting that globally similar and dissimilar non-rhyming pairs are processed in a similar fashion at the stage of early lexical access.

► We examined whether the N450 component can be used to investigate global similarity effects. ► Participants made rhyme judgments of rhyming, overlapping and unrelated words. ► Behaviorally, participants had difficulty judging overlapping pairs as non-rhyming. ► Neural responses to non-rhyming conditions (overlapping and unrelated) did not differ. ► Both non-rhyming conditions did show an N450 effect when compared to rhyming pairs.

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