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The interaction of predictive processing and similarity-based retrieval interference: an ERP study

Pia Schoknecht, Dietmar Roehm, Matthias Schlesewsky, Ina Bornkessel‐Schlesewsky

2022Language Cognition and Neuroscience18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Language processing requires memory retrieval to integrate current input with previous context and making predictions about upcoming input. We propose that prediction and retrieval are two sides of the same coin, i.e. functionally the same, as they both activate memory representations. Under this assumption, memory retrieval and prediction should interact: Retrieval interference can only occur at a word that triggers retrieval and a fully predicted word would not do that. The present study investigated the proposed interaction with event-related potentials (ERPs) during the processing of sentence pairs in German. Predictability was measured via cloze probability. Memory retrieval was manipulated via the position of a distractor inducing proactive or retroactive similarity-based interference. Linear mixed model analyses provided evidence for the hypothesised interaction in a broadly distributed negativity, which we discuss in relation to the interference ERP literature. Our finding supports the proposal that memory retrieval and prediction are functionally the same.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceSimilarity (geometry)Natural language processingSentenceContext (archaeology)PredictabilitySentence processingInterference (communication)Artificial intelligencePaleontologyBiologyComputer networkQuantum mechanicsPhysicsChannel (broadcasting)Image (mathematics)Neurobiology of Language and BilingualismNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesMemory Processes and Influences
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