Fischer-Baum Simon, Dickson Danielle S, Federmeier Kara D
Department of Psychology, Rice University.
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Lang Cogn Neurosci. 2014 Nov;29(10):1342-1355. doi: 10.1080/23273798.2014.927067.
Many theories of visual word processing assume obligatory semantic access and phonological recoding whenever a written word is encountered. However, the relative importance of different reading processes depends on task. The current study uses event related potentials (ERPs) to investigate whether - and, if so, when and how - effects of task modulate how visually-presented words are processed. Participants were presented written words in the context of two tasks, delayed reading aloud and proper name detection. Stimuli varied factorially on lexical frequency and on spellingto-sound regularity, while controlling for other lexical variables. Effects of both lexical frequency and regularity were modulated by task. Lexical frequency modulated N400 amplitude, but only in the reading aloud task, whereas spellingto-sound regularity interacted with frequency to modulate the LPC, again only in the reading aloud task. Taken together, these results demonstrate that task demands affect how meaning and sound are generated from written words.
许多视觉单词处理理论认为,每当遇到书面单词时,都会进行强制性的语义通达和语音编码。然而,不同阅读过程的相对重要性取决于任务。当前的研究使用事件相关电位(ERP)来探究任务效应是否以及(如果是)何时、如何调节视觉呈现单词的处理方式。参与者在两项任务的情境下呈现书面单词,即延迟朗读和专有名词检测。刺激在词汇频率和拼写-发音规则性方面进行了析因变化,同时控制其他词汇变量。词汇频率和规则性的效应都受到任务的调节。词汇频率调节了N400波幅,但仅在朗读任务中如此,而拼写-发音规则性与频率相互作用以调节晚期正成分(LPC),同样也仅在朗读任务中如此。总之,这些结果表明任务需求会影响从书面单词中生成意义和声音的方式。