Abstract
N400-like components in the ERP are commonly understood as being inversely related to the degree at which contextual factors have prepared the brain for the processing of meaningful stimuli. Here we show independent and systematic effects of familiarity and context on mid-central N450 in a simple visual priming task. Participants selected a target digit defined by color while ignoring a distractor digit. Pairs of two subsequent displays (prime, probe) were considered. Probe target familiarity could be high (prime–probe target repetition), low (novel probe target), or very low (probe target = prime distractor). Context strength depended on history of the probe distractor and could be high (prime–probe distractor repetition), low (novel probe distractor), or very low (probe distractor = prime target). The seven priming conditions showed exactly the predicted order of N450 amplitude, with largest N450 for strong context/low target familiarity and smallest N450 for weak context/high target familiarity. Results significantly broaden the view of N400, as a universal marker of stimulus familiarity and context strength also in basic, non-linguistic settings.
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