Abstract

We compared multi-dimensional selection on the basis of the color, the global shape and the local shape of alphanumeric (letters) and non- alphanumeric (non-letters) stimuli. We investigated whether letters are selected on the basis of name codes or on the basis of highly familiar local shape codes. Participants responded to a single conjunction of color, global shape and local shape occurring in a randomized stream of other conjunctions of these attributes. Dependent variables were reaction time and measures derived from event-related brain potentials (onset latencies and peak amplitudes of the occipital selection negativity, SN). The SN results showed that, for both letters and non-letters, color and global shape were selected first and local shape was selected later. Reaction times were faster, and SN to the local shape occurred earlier for letters than for non-letters. The SN to the local shape of letters was larger than the SN to the local shape of non-letters. In contrast, the SN to the global shape of letters was smaller than the SN to the global shape of non-letters. Selection of the global shape of letters, but not of non-letters, depended on whether they occurred in the relevant color. Selection of the color of both letters and non-letters was independent of shape relevance, and selection of the local shape of both letters and non-letters was independent of color relevance. These results suggest that, (1) both letter and non-letter shapes are initially analyzed in a feature-specific manner; and (2) letters are selected for task- directed processing on the basis of highly familiar local shape codes and not on the basis of name codes.

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