PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Immediate auditory repetition of words and nonwords: an ERP study of lexical and sublexical processing.

  • Xiaorong Cheng,
  • Graham Schafer,
  • Patricia M Riddell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091988
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e91988

Abstract

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ERPs were elicited to (1) words, (2) pseudowords derived from these words, and (3) nonwords with no lexical neighbors, in a task involving listening to immediately repeated auditory stimuli. There was a significant early (P200) effect of phonotactic probability in the first auditory presentation, which discriminated words and pseudowords from nonwords; and a significant somewhat later (N400) effect of lexicality, which discriminated words from pseudowords and nonwords. There was no reliable effect of lexicality in the ERPs to the second auditory presentation. We conclude that early sublexical phonological processing differed according to phonotactic probability of the stimuli, and that lexically-based redintegration occurred for words but did not occur for pseudowords or nonwords. Thus, in online word recognition and immediate retrieval, phonological and/or sublexical processing plays a more important role than lexical level redintegration.