Brain error-monitoring activity is affected by semantic relatedness: An event-related brain potentials study
Speakers continuously monitor what they say. Sometimes,
self-monitoring malfunctions and errors pass undetected and
uncorrected. In the field of action monitoring, an event-related
brain potential, the error-related negativity (ERN), is associated
with error processing. The present study relates the ERN to verbal
self-monitoring and investigates how the ERN is affected by auditory
distractors during verbal monitoring. We found that the
ERN was largest following errors that occurred after semantically
related distractors had been presented, as compared to semantically
unrelated ones. This result demonstrates that the ERN is
sensitive not only to response conflict resulting from the incompatibility
of motor responses but also to more abstract lexical
retrieval conflict resulting from activation of multiple lexical entries.
This, in turn, suggests that the functioning of the verbal
self-monitoring system during speaking is comparable to other
performance monitoring, such as action monitoring.
Share this page