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Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

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Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]. / Bernabeu, Pablo; Willems, Roel; Louwerse, Max.
2017. Poster session presented at 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Vancouver, Canada.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

Harvard

Bernabeu, P, Willems, R & Louwerse, M 2017, 'Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]', 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Vancouver, Canada, 9/11/17 - 12/11/17. <https://osf.io/ajgq3/>

APA

Bernabeu, P., Willems, R., & Louwerse, M. (2017). Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]. Poster session presented at 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Vancouver, Canada. https://osf.io/ajgq3/

Vancouver

Bernabeu P, Willems R, Louwerse M. Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]. 2017. Poster session presented at 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Vancouver, Canada.

Author

Bernabeu, Pablo ; Willems, Roel ; Louwerse, Max. / Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]. Poster session presented at 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Vancouver, Canada.

Bibtex

@conference{1d06587a78714cbfb77e77dc532670c8,
title = "Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]",
abstract = "We tested whether conceptual processing is modality-specific by tracking the time course of the Conceptual Modality Switch effect. Forty-six participants verified the relation between property words and concept words. The conceptual modality of consecutive trials was manipulated in order to produce an Auditory-to-visual switch condition, a Haptic-to-visual switch condition, and a Visual-to-visual, no-switch condition. Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) were time-locked to the onset of the first word (property) in the target trials so as to measure the effect online and to avoid a within-trial confound. A switch effect was found, characterized by more negative ERP amplitudes for modality switches than no-switches. It proved significant in four typical time windows from 160 to 750 milliseconds post word onset, with greater strength in posterior brain regions, and after 350 milliseconds. These results suggest that conceptual processing may be modality-specific in certain tasks, but also that the early stage of processing is relatively amodal.",
author = "Pablo Bernabeu and Roel Willems and Max Louwerse",
note = "Conference poster; 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society ; Conference date: 09-11-2017 Through 12-11-2017",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
url = "https://www.psychonomic.org/page/2017program",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Modality Switch Effects Emerge Early and Increase Throughout Conceptual Processing: Evidence From ERPs [Poster]

AU - Bernabeu, Pablo

AU - Willems, Roel

AU - Louwerse, Max

N1 - Conference poster

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - We tested whether conceptual processing is modality-specific by tracking the time course of the Conceptual Modality Switch effect. Forty-six participants verified the relation between property words and concept words. The conceptual modality of consecutive trials was manipulated in order to produce an Auditory-to-visual switch condition, a Haptic-to-visual switch condition, and a Visual-to-visual, no-switch condition. Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) were time-locked to the onset of the first word (property) in the target trials so as to measure the effect online and to avoid a within-trial confound. A switch effect was found, characterized by more negative ERP amplitudes for modality switches than no-switches. It proved significant in four typical time windows from 160 to 750 milliseconds post word onset, with greater strength in posterior brain regions, and after 350 milliseconds. These results suggest that conceptual processing may be modality-specific in certain tasks, but also that the early stage of processing is relatively amodal.

AB - We tested whether conceptual processing is modality-specific by tracking the time course of the Conceptual Modality Switch effect. Forty-six participants verified the relation between property words and concept words. The conceptual modality of consecutive trials was manipulated in order to produce an Auditory-to-visual switch condition, a Haptic-to-visual switch condition, and a Visual-to-visual, no-switch condition. Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) were time-locked to the onset of the first word (property) in the target trials so as to measure the effect online and to avoid a within-trial confound. A switch effect was found, characterized by more negative ERP amplitudes for modality switches than no-switches. It proved significant in four typical time windows from 160 to 750 milliseconds post word onset, with greater strength in posterior brain regions, and after 350 milliseconds. These results suggest that conceptual processing may be modality-specific in certain tasks, but also that the early stage of processing is relatively amodal.

M3 - Poster

T2 - 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society

Y2 - 9 November 2017 through 12 November 2017

ER -