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Early Time Course Hemisphere Differences in Phonological

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Title: Early Time Course Hemisphere Differences in Phonological


1
Early Time Course Hemisphere Differences in
Phonological Orthographic ProcessesLaura K.
Halderman1, Christine Chiarello1 Natalie
Kacinik21University of California, Riverside
2University of California, Davis
Introduction
Predictions
Simple Masking Experiment
  • Left Hemisphere
  • LH will show facilitation for orthographic
    condition at both SOAs
  • LH will show facilitation for phonological
    condition at both SOAs
  • Right Hemisphere
  • RH will show facilitation for orthographic
    condition at both SOAs
  • RH will not show facilitation for phonological
    condition
  • However, if phonological processes are slower in
    the RH, facilitation may occur in the 50 ms SOA
  • Chiarello (2003) has proposed that the cerebral
    hemispheres use different processing styles for
    linguistic information
  • LH - processes information rapidly, quickly
    moving to a deeper level, discarding initial,
    more shallow representations
  • RH - processes information more slowly,
    maintaining shallow representations of the
    information, even if no longer relevant
  • Form-Specific vs Abstract Form (Marsolek et al.,
    1992)
  • Word Length effects in RH (Lavidor Ellis, 2002)
  • This model did not specifically consider
    phonological processes in reading
  • Research on split-brain patients has revealed
    little evidence for Grapheme-to-Phoneme
    Conversion processes in RH (Baynes Eliassen,
    1998 Zaidel, 1985)
  • GPC processes in the LH have been attributed to
    speech mechanisms being located in the same
    hemisphere
  • Normal population studies have revealed mixed
    results
  • Phonology
  • No evidence for phonology in RH (Khateb et al.,
    2000 Crossman Polich, 1988 Rayman Zaidel,
    1991)
  • Used metalinguistic tasks - Rhyme Judgment
  • Evidence for bilateral phonological processes
    (Chiarello et al., 1999 Coney, 2002 Weekes,
    1999)
  • Orthography
  • Greater orthographic processes in the RH
    (Crossman Polich, 1988 Marsolek, 1992)
  • Orthographic facilitation in RH, but no
    phonological facilitation (Lavidor Ellis, 2003)
  • A second experiment was conducted using a similar
    paradigm to compare the effects of the pseudoword
    mask to a condition with no pseudoword mask
  • All methods were repeated except no pseudoword
    appeared between the target and final pattern
    mask
  • Only the 30 ms SOA was examined
  • Participants - 48 Native English speaking,
    Right-handed undergraduates

Results
Backward Masking Methods
No pseudoword condition compared to pseudoword
condition - 30 ms
  • Participants
  • 96 Native English speaking undergraduates
  • Right-handed
  • Stimuli Presentation
  • 150 Experimental Trials
  • Pseudowords matched for orthographic regularity
    using Bigram frequencies (Mayzner Tresselt,
    1965)
  • Forced Choice items matched for frequency
    (Francis Kucera, 1982)
  • 30 ms 50 ms SOAs
  • Each component of the stimuli was presented for
    30 ms or 50 ms

Lateralized Backward Masking
  • Significant RVF advantage
  • NoMask condition interacts with OP and OP-
    conditions
  • No interaction between NoMask conditon and O-P-
    condition

Results
30 ms SOA - RT - Visual Field X Mask Type
Conclusions
  • LH
  • OP lt OP-
  • OP- lt O-P-
  • RH
  • OP OP-
  • OP- lt O-P-
  • When no pseudoword mask is presented, the RVF
    advantage is equal to the Unrelated pseudoword
    mask condition
  • However, when a pseudoword mask sharing relevant
    orthographic or phonological information is
    present, the hemispheres differentially use the
    overlapping information to facilitate target
    recognition
  • The LH is benefited most by overlapping phonology
    at the shortest SOA, while the RH is benefited
    most by orthography
  • RH does not show access to phonology, but it does
    demonstrate greater orthographic facilitation
    than the LH at this early time course, an effect
    similar to Lavidor and Ellis (2003)
  • These results suggest the LH is capable of
    generating a phonological representation of words
    very quickly, perhaps automatically
  • The RH, on the other hand, is capable of
    generating an orthographic representation very
    rapidly which stands in contrast to general
    findings of slower, RH processes (Chiarello,
    2003)
  • Presentation of target beings initial processing
    which is interrupted by the pseudoword mask
  • Similar masks reinstate some of the initial
    decoded properties of the target and facilitates
    identification
  • Pattern mask restricts perception to the initial
    processed properties of the target and mask
  • Participants are unaware of the nonword mask

50 ms SOA - RT - Visual Field X Mask Type
  • LH
  • OP OP-
  • OP- lt O-P-
  • RH
  • OP OP-
  • OP- lt O-P-

Mask Type Conditions
OP OP- O-P-
boat boat boat
BOTE BOTS NENE
This research was conducted under the support of
the National Science Foundation grant
BCS-0079456, granted to the second author.
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