A cognitive-anatomical approach to attention in lexical access

  • Authors:
  • Paul E. Compton;Peter Grossenbacher;Michael I. Posner;Don M. Tucker

  • Affiliations:
  • University of Oregon;University of Oregon;University of Oregon;University of Oregon

  • Venue:
  • Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Year:
  • 1991

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Abstract

Recent PET studies have suggested a specific anatomy for feature identification, visual word forms and semantic associations. Our studies seek to explore the time course of access to these systems by use of reaction time and scalp electrical recording. Target detection times suggest that different forms of representation are involved in the detection of letter features, feature conjunctions (letters), and words. Feature search is fastest at the fovea and slows symmetrically with greater foveal eccentricity. It is not influenced by lexicality. Detecting a letter case (conjunction) shows a left to right search which differs between words and consonant strings. Analysis of scalp electrical distribution suggest an occipito-temporal distribution for the analysis of visual features (right sided) and for the visual word form discrimination (left sided). These fit with the PET results, and suggest that the feature related analysis begins within the first 100 millisec and the visual word form discriminates words from strings by about 200 msec. Lexical decision instructions can modify the computations found in both frontal and posterior areas.