Attentional modulation of orthographic neighborhood effects during reading: Evidence from event-related brain potentials in a psychological refractory period paradigm

scientific article published in PLoS ONE

Attentional modulation of orthographic neighborhood effects during reading: Evidence from event-related brain potentials in a psychological refractory period paradigm is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0199084
P932PMC publication ID6347252
P698PubMed publication ID30682023

P50authorMilena RabovskyQ91221558
Markus ConradQ50139785
P2093author name stringWerner Sommer
Carlos J Álvarez
Jörg Paschke-Goldt
P2860cites workAge differences in overlapping-task performance: evidence for efficient parallel processing in older adultsQ74815589
Visual duration threshold as a function of word-probabilityQ75832161
Dissociating sources of dual-task interference using human electrophysiologyQ80023201
Processing stages in overlapping tasks: Evidence for a central bottleneckQ42665230
Syllable-frequency effects in visual word recognition: evidence from ERPs.Q46020430
The locus of dual-task interference: psychological refractory effects on movement-related brain potentialsQ46961990
Model-generated lexical activity predicts graded ERP amplitudes in lexical decisionQ48658074
Central processing overlap modulates P3 latencyQ48930786
Inhibitory effects of first syllable-frequency in lexical decision: an event-related potential studyQ50139707
Reading aloud is not automatic: processing capacity is required to generate a phonological code from print.Q51909180
Visual word recognition without central attention: evidence for greater automaticity with greater reading ability.Q51956828
A psychological refractory period in access to visual short-term memory and the deployment of visual-spatial attention: multitasking processing deficits revealed by event-related potentials.Q51977215
Effects of phonological and orthographic neighbourhood density interact in visual word recognition.Q51988376
Effects of frequency on visual word recognition tasks: where are they?Q52247274
Dipole modelling of eye activity and its application to the removal of eye artefacts from the EEG and MEG.Q53798352
Guidelines for using human event-related potentials to study cognition: recording standards and publication criteriaQ73581007
The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventoryQ26778476
DRC: a dual route cascaded model of visual word recognition and reading aloudQ28201828
A distributed, developmental model of word recognition and namingQ28279944
Thirty years and counting: finding meaning in the N400 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP).Q30436872
PSPs and ERPs: applying the dynamics of post-synaptic potentials to individual units in simulation of temporally extended Event-Related Potential reading data.Q30789955
Phonology as the source of syllable frequency effects in visual word recognition: evidence from FrenchQ33301173
A neurally plausible parallel distributed processing model of event-related potential word reading dataQ34029950
An electrophysiological study of the effects of orthographic neighborhood size on printed word perceptionQ34145537
The N400 as a snapshot of interactive processing: Evidence from regression analyses of orthographic neighbor and lexical associate effectsQ34204206
Understanding normal and impaired word reading: computational principles in quasi-regular domainsQ34382608
A central capacity sharing model of dual-task performanceQ35096488
The N400 potential could index a semantic inhibitionQ37000937
On the functional nature of the N400: Contrasting effects related to visual word recognition and contextual semantic integration.Q38375477
Orthographic and associative neighborhood density effects: what is shared, what is different?Q38376147
When underadditivity of factor effects in the Psychological Refractory Period paradigm implies a bottleneck: evidence from psycholinguisticsQ38382396
Rules and heuristics during sentence comprehension: evidence from a dual-task brain potential studyQ38387629
Is lexical access autonomous? Evidence from combining overlapping tasks with recording event-related brain potentials.Q38389223
On the nonautomaticity of visual word processing: electrophysiological evidence that word processing requires central attentionQ38390002
Reading aloud: spelling-sound translation uses central attentionQ38391838
Visual word recognition without central attention: evidence for greater automaticity with advancing age.Q38404033
Neighborhood effects in reading aloud: new findings and new challenges for computational modelsQ38405331
Frequency effects in spoken and visual word recognition: evidence from dual-task methodologies.Q38409216
Effects of additional tasks on language perception: an event-related brain potential investigationQ38420375
Is word perception in a second language more vulnerable than in one's native language? Evidence from brain potentials in a dual task settingQ38422171
Simulating the N400 ERP component as semantic network error: insights from a feature-based connectionist attractor model of word meaningQ38431581
Phonology matters: the phonological frequency effect in written ChineseQ38441246
A dual-task investigation of automaticity in visual word processingQ38443899
Knowledge inhibition and N400: a study with words that look like common wordsQ38453576
Effects of orthographic neighborhood in visual word recognition: cross-task comparisonsQ38455985
Orthographic processing in visual word recognition: a multiple read-out modelQ38459776
No enemies in the neighborhood: absence of inhibitory neighborhood effects in lexical decision and semantic categorizationQ38460410
On the automaticity of semantic processing during task switchingQ38483246
The role of preparation in overlapping-task performanceQ38573054
Word-frequency effect and response biasQ40051887
The ERP response to the amount of information conveyed by words in sentences.Q41740779
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalQ20007257
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P433issue1
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectattentionQ6501338
P304page(s)e0199084
P577publication date2019-01-25
P1433published inPLOS OneQ564954
P1476titleAttentional modulation of orthographic neighborhood effects during reading: Evidence from event-related brain potentials in a psychological refractory period paradigm
P478volume14