K. Ainsworthdarnell et al., DISSOCIATING BRAIN RESPONSES TO SYNTACTIC AND SEMANTIC ANOMALIES - EVIDENCE FROM EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS, Journal of memory and language, 38(1), 1998, pp. 112-130
Two experiments investigated the influence of anomaly type and present
ation rate on the occurrence and appearance of the event-related brain
potentials (ERPs) known as the N400 and P600. In Experiment 1, senten
ces containing either a syntactic anomaly, a semantic anomaly, or a co
mpound syntactic and semantic anomaly were presented at the rate of 10
00 ms per word. Consistent with previous findings, syntactic anomalies
elicited a P600, while semantic anomalies elicited an N400. Compound
anomalies evoked an N400-P600 waveform complex. Experiment 2 investiga
ted the effect of presentation rate on ERPs using the syntactic anomal
y materials from Osterhout and Holcomb (1992: Experiment]) at the 650
ms SOA from the original study and a new 1000 ms SOA. Although the amp
litude and latency of the P600 waveform differed slightly between the
two presentation rates, reliable P600s a ere found at both the 650 and
the 1000 ms SOA. (C) 1998 Academic Press.