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Dive into the research topics where Diana Deacon is active.

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Featured researches published by Diana Deacon.


Ear and Hearing | 1995

The mismatch negativity of event-related potentials as a probe of transient auditory memory: a review

Walter Ritter; Diana Deacon; Hilary Gomes; Daniel C. Javitt; Herbert G. Vaughan

The use of the mismatch negativity as a probe to study the memory upon which it depends is reviewed. Topics about the memory include its duration, its capacity, the kind of information that can be stored in the memory, how the information is stored, whether the memory is accessed in parallel or in series, whether it is hard-wired or can be modified by experience, and its relationship to sensory memory.


Psychophysiology | 2004

Repetition and semantic priming of nonwords: implications for theories of N400 and word recognition.

Diana Deacon; Anna Dynowska; Walter Ritter; Jillian Grose-Fifer

ERPs were elicited by two types of orthographically legal, pronounceable nonwords. One nonword set was derived from and resembled real words, whereas the other set did not. Nonwords derived from related root words elicited N400 semantic priming effects similar to those obtained for words, indicating semantic activation of the root words. N400 repetition priming effects from nonderived nonwords were similar to those obtained for words. The elicitation of N400 by only derived nonwords would have suggested it was generated by the activation of word meanings, per se. However, both types of nonwords produced an N400, and an N400 priming effect. Because nonderived nonwords are not associated with meaning, the N400 cannot be generated by semantic activation per se. Rather, the N400 appears to be generated by orthographic/phonological analysis and is attenuated by the top-down feed of semantic information to the orthographic/phonological level.


Cognitive Brain Research | 1999

The lifetime of automatic semantic priming effects may exceed two seconds.

Diana Deacon; Tae-Joon Uhm; Walter Ritter; Sean Hewitt; Anna Dynowska

The N400 component of event-related potentials (ERPs) was obtained in a modified version of the Neely [J.H. Neely, Semantic priming and retrieval from lexical memory: Roles of inhibitionless spreading activation and limited-capacity attention, Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Vol. 106 (1977), pp. 226-254.] paradigm which permits unconfounding of semantic priming effects due to automatic and attentional processes. It was found that a short stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) of 250 ms between the prime and the target was associated with automatic but not expectancy effects on the amplitude of N400. At a long SOA of 2000 ms between prime and target, semantic priming effects on N400 were obtained associated with both automatic and expectancy processes. Moreover, there was no significance difference in the magnitude of the automatic effects at the two SOAs, suggesting that automatic processing had not decayed within the 2000 ms interval between the prime and target. The results support the two-processing interpretation of semantic priming advanced by Posner and Synder [M.I. Posner, C.R.R. Snyder, Attention and cognitive control, in: R.L. Solso (Ed.), Information Processing and Cognition: The Loyola Symposium, Erlbaum, Hillsdale, NJ (1975).] and concur with the results of Neely [J.H. Neely, Semantic priming and retrieval from lexical memory: Roles of inhibitionless spreading activation and limited-capacity attention, Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Vol. 106 (1977), pp. 226-254], with the exception of indicating a longer persistence of automatic processes.


Cognitive Brain Research | 1996

Storage of information in transient auditory memory

Jo Manette Nousak; Diana Deacon; Walter Ritter; Herbert G. Vaughan

This study concerns the manner in which features of auditory stimuli are stored in acoustic memory. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded to sequences of tones in which sequential, infrequent deviant tones were presented in a row, each of which differed from the frequent standard tones along a different stimulus dimension. The object was to determine whether a change in a single feature of a stimulus would have an effect on the entire representation of the standard tone in memory, or only on the representation of the stimulus dimension by which the first deviant differed from the standards. It was found that the amplitude of the mismatch negativity elicited by subsequent deviants was not reduced by the presence of the first deviant, supporting independent storage of features.


Psychophysiology | 1998

Automatic change detection: Does the auditory system use representations of individual stimulus features or gestalts?

Diana Deacon; Jo Manette Nousak; Maura Pilotti; Walter Ritter; Chien-Ming Yang

The effects of global and feature-specific probabilities of auditory stimuli were manipulated to determine their effects on the mismatch negativity (MMN) of the human event-related potential. The question of interest was whether the automatic comparison of stimuli indexed by the MMN was performed on representations of individual stimulus features or on gestalt representations of their combined attributes. The design of the study was such that both feature and gestalt representations could have been available to the comparator mechanism generating the MMN. The data were consistent with the interpretation that the MMN was generated following an analysis of stimulus features.


Cortex | 2004

Evidence for a new conceptualization of semantic representation in the left and right cerebral hemispheres

Diana Deacon; Jillian Grose-Fifer; Chien-Ming Yang; Virginia Stanick; Sean Hewitt; Anna Dynowska

Two experiments are reported that examined qualitative differences in how semantic information is represented in the two hemispheres. In the first experiment, items that were associatively related but did not share semantic features or membership in semantic categories produced priming when delivered to the LH (RVF) but not to the RH (LVF). In the second experiment items that shared semantic features but were neither associates nor in the same category produced priming in the RH (LVF), but not in the LH (RVF). Together, the two experiments support the theory that, in the right hemisphere, semantic memories are represented within a distributed system, on the basis of semantic features, whereas, in the left hemisphere representations are, as in local models, relatively more holistic, and are connected via associative links.


Neuropsychologia | 2004

Priming by natural category membership in the left and right cerebral hemispheres

Jillian Grose-Fifer; Diana Deacon

The cerebral representation of category information was examined in a single word priming paradigm, during which the N400 component of the event-related potential (ERP) was recorded. The visual half-field paradigm was employed in order to selectively stimulate the two hemispheres. To investigate which aspects of category membership are relevant in producing priming, two types of related stimuli were presented. In one condition pairs of exemplars had a higher amount of feature overlap (e.g., MOSQUITO-FLEA) than in the other (e.g., SOFA-VASE). Significant priming was obtained only for stimuli in the high feature overlap condition and then only when these were presented to the left visual field (LVF)/right hemisphere (RH). This finding was interpreted within our recent model of semantic memory wherein the right hemisphere represents items on the basis of distributed individual features, whereas the left hemisphere (LH) represents semantic information locally, within a spreading activation system, where priming occurs exclusively through associative links. It was concluded that knowledge regarding category membership is maintained in the RH, on the basis of feature coding.


Cognitive Brain Research | 1998

Event-related potential indices of semantic priming following an unrelated intervening item

Diana Deacon; Sean Hewitt; Tara Tamney

Interposing an unrelated word between related primes and targets often disrupts priming. This finding has been used to support the view that semantic information is represented in a distributed fashion, rather than locally. In some studies where unrelated items intervened between the prime and target, however, significant priming was nevertheless obtained. The discrepant results of these studies has been attributed to differences in speed-accuracy tradeoff, post-lexical checking, conscious rehearsal of the prime and differences in the depth to which the prime and target were processed. The present study was designed in such a way as to minimize variability associated with post-lexical influences. The N400 component of the human event-related potential was used as a physiological index of the extent to which priming occurred with and without the interposition of an unrelated item. Priming effects on both the amplitude and latency of the N400 were rendered non-significant by the presence of an intervening unrelated word. The results are interpreted as tentative evidence that semantic representations are distributed.


Brain and Language | 2004

Physiological evidence that a masked unrelated intervening item disrupts semantic priming: Implications for theories of semantic representation and retrieval models of semantic priming

Diana Deacon; Jillian Grose-Fifer; Sean Hewitt; Masanori Nagata; John Shelley-Tremblay; Chien-Ming Yang

Event-related potentials were recorded in a paradigm where an unrelated word was interposed between two related words. In one condition, the intervening item was masked and in another condition it was not. The N400 component indicated that priming of the related word was disrupted by the intervening item whether it was masked or not. The data are interpreted to be inconsistent with retrieval models of priming.


Neuroscience Letters | 2000

Effect of frequency separation and stimulus rate on the mismatch negativity: an examination of the issue of refractoriness in humans.

Diana Deacon; Hilary Gomes; Jo Manette Nousak; Walter Ritter; Daniel C. Javitt

Refractoriness of the generators of the mismatch negativity (MMN) was examined in two experiments in which two deviant tones occurred in a row. In Experiment 1, the size of the MMN elicited by the first deviant was manipulated by using deviants that were close to or far from the standard in frequency. In Experiment 2, the time between two identical deviants was varied. It was found that neither the size of the MMN elicited by the first deviant, nor the time between two deviants, affected the amplitude of the MMN elicited by the second deviant. It was concluded that refractoriness played no role in the amplitude of the MMN for the parameters used.

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Walter Ritter

Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research

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Sean Hewitt

City University of New York

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Chien-Ming Yang

National Chengchi University

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Anna Dynowska

City University of New York

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Hilary Gomes

City University of New York

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Jo Manette Nousak

City University of New York

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Daniel C. Javitt

Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research

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Herbert G. Vaughan

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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