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Progress in Neurobiology 70 (2003) 53--81
, 2003
"... This article reviews functional neuroimaging studies of priming, a behavioural change associated with the repeated processing of a stimulus. Using the haemodynamic techniques of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET), priming-related effects have been obs ..."
Abstract
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This article reviews functional neuroimaging studies of priming, a behavioural change associated with the repeated processing of a stimulus. Using the haemodynamic techniques of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET), priming-related effects have been observed in numerous regions of the human brain, with the specific regions depending on the type of stimulus and the manner in which it is processed. The most common finding is a decreased haemodynamic response for primed versus unprimed stimuli, though priming-related response increases have been observed. Attempts have been made to relate these effects to a form of implicit or "unconscious" memory. The priming-related decrease has also been used as a tool to map the brain regions associated with different stages of stimulus-processing, a method claimed to offer superior spatial resolution. This decrease has a potential analogue in the stimulus repetition effects measured with single-cell recording in the non-human primate. The paradigms reviewed include word-stem completion, masked priming, repetition priming of visual objects and semantic priming. An attempt is made to relate the findings within a "component process" framework, and the relationship between behavioural, haemodynamic and neurophysiological data is discussed. Interpretation of the findings is not always clear-cut, however, given potential confounding factors such as explicit memory, and several recommendations are made for future neuroimaging studies of priming.
2 Experimental Phonetics Group,
"... Lexical access from spectrum? Phonetic properties of proper names and common nouns in German and Mandarin Chinese State of the art of phonetic language aptitude linking phonetic as well as phonological models to empirical neuroimaging (neurolinguistic) research Phonetic convergence as a paradigm of ..."
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Lexical access from spectrum? Phonetic properties of proper names and common nouns in German and Mandarin Chinese State of the art of phonetic language aptitude linking phonetic as well as phonological models to empirical neuroimaging (neurolinguistic) research Phonetic convergence as a paradigm of showing phonetic talent in foreign language acquisition. Institute for Natural Language Processing, Repeated masked semantic priming with new results: ERPs of a negative semantic priming effect. Space, time, and the use of language: An

