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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Brain Lang. 2015 May 16;0:23–33. doi: 10.1016/j.bandl.2015.04.001

Figure 6.

Figure 6

Grand-average waveforms time-locked to the onset of the visual word within the reading verification task at nine channel clusters. Three conditions are shown separately: words that have been previously trained in the GP script (GP-trained, solid dark green), words that have not been previously trained in the GP script but are decodable based on GP-mappings (GP-transfer, dotted green), and words that have been trained in the WW script (WW-trained, solid gold). The 9 sites cover approximately the 10-10 equivalents of fronto-central (top row), centro-parietal (middle row), and occipito-parietal (bottom row) in the left hemisphere (odd numbered channels, leftmost column), midline, and the right hemisphere (even numbered channels, rightmost column). Gray vertical rectangles illustrate significant intervals (fdr p<0.05) based on the whole-map TANOVA analyses. Highlighted are the two sites – PO7 and PO8 – in which the whole-map the effect of attentional focus during learning (contrasting GP-trained with WW-trained words in the N170 segment) and the effect of decoding (contrasting GP-trained with GP-transfer words in the LPC segment) are most prominent. Notable also is the lack of differences between GP-trained and GP-transfer word processing during the N170 interval.