Semantic and perceptual priming activate partially overlapping brain networks as revealed by direct cortical recordings in humans

Elvira Khachatryan, Benjamin Wittevrongel, Mansoureh Fahimi Hnazaee, Evelien Carrette, Ine Dauwe, Alfred Meurs, Paul Boon, Dirk van Roost, Marc M Van Hulle

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    9 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Facilitation of object processing in the brain due to a related context (priming) can be influenced by both semantic connections and perceptual similarity. It is thus important to discern these two when evaluating the spatio-temporal dynamics of primed object processing. The repetition-priming paradigm frequently used to study perceptual priming is, however, unable to differentiate between the mentioned priming effects, possibly leading to confounded results. In the current study, we recorded brain signals from the scalp and cerebral convexity of nine patients with refractory epilepsy in response to related and unrelated image-pairs, all of which shared perceptual features while only related ones had a semantic connection. While previous studies employing a repetition-priming paradigm observed largely overlapping networks between semantic and perceptual priming effects, our results suggest that this overlap is only partial (both temporally and spatially). These findings stress the importance of controlling for perceptual features when studying semantic priming.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number116204
    JournalNeuroImage
    Volume203
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Dec 2019

    Bibliographical note

    Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Keywords

    • Semantic and perceptual
    • activate partially
    • overlapping
    • brain networks

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