Abstract

Objectives: Event-related desynchronization (ERD) and synchronization (ERS) of the 8–10 and 10–12 Hz frequency bands of the background EEG were studied in 10 subjects performing an auditory lexical matching task. Methods: The stimuli were words and pseudowords presented sequentially in pairs. The subject was prompted to answer whether the two stimuli shared the same lexical status (words or pseudowords). Results: Regardless of lexicality, the presentation of the first stimulus elicited a significant late frontal ERD in both alpha frequency bands. When preceded by a pseudoword, the presentation of the second stimulus elicited a significant ERS at 200–400 ms and a significant, long-lasting and topographically-widespread ERD at 600–2200 ms in both frequency bands. When preceded by a word, the second stimulus did not elicit ERS in the initial time window, but a late ERD which was similar to the one observed in the previous condition. The complexity of ERD/ERS changes in the present task was revealed by significant interactions that time had with frequency band, stimulus type, stimulus order and lexicality of the preceding stimulus. Conclusions: The results suggest that ERD/ERS does not reflect primary auditory stimulus processing. Rather, the ERD/ERS observed in this experiment most probably reflected task difficulty and differences between lexical–semantic and phonological memory functions.

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