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General proactive interference and the N450 response
Authors:William J. Tays  Jane DywanSidney J. Segalowitz
Affiliation:Psychology Department, Brock University, 500 Glenridge Avenue, St. Catharines, Ontario L2S 3A1, Canada
Abstract:Strategic repetition of verbal stimuli can effectively produce proactive interference (PI) effects in the Sternberg working memory task. Unique fronto-cortical activation to PI-eliciting letter probes has been interpreted as reflecting brain responses to PI. However, the use of only a small set of stimuli (e.g., letters and digits) requires constant repetition of stimuli in both PI and baseline trials, potentially creating a general PI effect in all conditions. We used event-related potentials to examine general PI effects by contrasting the interference-related frontal N450 response in two Sternberg tasks using a small versus large set size. We found that the N450 response differed significantly from baseline during the small set-size task only for response-conflict PI trials but not when PI was created solely from stimulus repetition. During the large set-size task N450 responses in both the familiarity-based and response-conflict PI conditions differed from baseline but not from each other. We conclude that the general stimulus repetition inherent in small set-size conditions can mask effects of familiarity-based PI and complicate the interpretation of any associated neural response.
Keywords:Event-related potentials (ERPs)   Medial frontal negativity (MFN)   Working memory   Familiarity-based interference   Response-based interference   Inhibitory control   Baseline problem
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