Title of article :
Chinese characters elicit face-like N170 inversion effects
Author/Authors :
Wang، نويسنده , , Man-Ying and Kuo، نويسنده , , Bo-Cheng and Cheng، نويسنده , , Shih-kuen Cheng، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
13
From page :
419
To page :
431
Abstract :
Recognition of both faces and Chinese characters is commonly believed to rely on configural information. While faces typically exhibit behavioral and N170 inversion effects that differ from non-face stimuli (Rossion, Joyce, Cottrell, & Tarr, 2003), the current study examined whether a similar reliance on configural processing may result in similar inversion effects for faces and Chinese characters. Participants were engaged in an orientation judgment task (Experiment 1) and a one-back identity matching task (Experiment 2). Across two experiments, the N170 was delayed and enhanced in magnitude for upside-down faces and compound Chinese characters, compared to upright stimuli. The inversion effects for these two stimulus categories were bilateral for latency and right-lateralized for amplitudes. For simple Chinese characters, only the latency inversion effects were significant. Moreover, the size of the right-hemisphere inversion effects in N170 amplitude was larger for faces than Chinese characters. These findings show the N170 inversion effects from non-face stimuli closely parallel effects seen with faces. Face-like N170 inversion effects elicited by Chinese compound characters were attributed to the difficulty of part-whole integration as well as the disrupted regularity in relational information due to inversion. Hemispheric difference in Chinese character processing is also discussed.
Keywords :
Inversion effect , Faces , N170 , Chinese characters , Configural processing
Journal title :
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Brain and Cognition
Record number :
2250533
Link To Document :
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