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Discovering the brain stages of lexical decision: Behavioral effects originate from a single neural decision process

Hermine S. Berberyan, Hedderik van Rijn, Jelmer P. Borst

2021Brain and Cognition25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lexical decision (LD) - judging whether a sequence of letters constitutes a word - has been widely investigated. In a typical lexical decision task (LDT), participants are asked to respond whether a sequence of letters is an actual word or a nonword. Although behavioral differences between types of words/nonwords have been robustly detected in LDT, there is an ongoing discussion about the exact cognitive processes that underlie the word identification process in this task. To obtain data-driven evidence on the underlying processes, we recorded electroencephalographic (EEG) data and applied a novel machine-learning method, hidden semi-Markov model multivariate pattern analysis (HsMM-MVPA). In the current study, participants performed an LDT in which we varied the frequency of words (high, low frequency) and "wordlikeness" of non-words (pseudowords, random non-words). The results revealed that models with six processing stages accounted best for the data in all conditions. While most stages were shared, Stage 5 differed between conditions. Together, these results indicate that the differences in word frequency and lexicality effects are driven by a single cognitive processing stage. Based on its latency and topology, we interpret this stage as a Decision process during which participants discriminate between words and nonwords using activated lexical information.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyLexical decision taskDecision processProcess (computing)Cognitive psychologyCognitive scienceCognitionNeuroscienceProcess managementComputer scienceOperating systemBusinessNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismReading and Literacy Development