Van Petten C, Kutas M
Department of Neurosciences, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093.
Mem Cognit. 1990 Jul;18(4):380-93. doi: 10.3758/bf03197127.
Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded as subjects silently read a set of unrelated sentences. The ERP responses elicited by open-class words were sorted according to word frequency and the ordinal position of the eliciting word within its sentence. We observed a strong inverse correlation between sentence position and the amplitude of the N400 component of the ERP. In addition, we found that less frequent words were associated with larger N400s than were more frequent words, but only if the eliciting words occurred early in their respective sentences. We take this interaction between sentence position and word frequency as evidence that frequency does not play a mandatory role in word recognition, but can be superseded by the contextual constraint provided by a sentence.
当受试者默读一组不相关的句子时,记录与事件相关的脑电位(ERP)。根据词频和引发词在句子中的序数位置,对开放类词引发的ERP反应进行分类。我们观察到句子位置与ERP的N400成分的幅度之间存在强烈的负相关。此外,我们发现,低频词比高频词与更大的N400相关,但前提是引发词出现在各自句子的早期。我们将句子位置和词频之间的这种相互作用作为证据,表明频率在单词识别中并不起强制性作用,而是可以被句子提供的上下文约束所取代。