Semantic Congruence Accelerates the Onset of the Neural Signals of Successful Memory Encoding.
Pau A PackardAntoni Rodríguez-FornellsNico BunzeckBerta NicolásJ Troy LittletonLluís FuentemillaPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Conceptual or schema congruence has a strong influence on long-term memory. However, the question of whether schema-related integration neural mechanisms occur during online encoding has yet to be clarified. We investigated the neural mechanisms reflecting how the active integration of words with congruent semantic categories enhances memory for words and increases false recall of semantically related words. We analyzed event-related potentials during encoding and showed that the onset of the neural signals of successful encoding appeared early (∼400 ms) during the encoding of congruent words. Our findings indicate that congruent events can trigger an accelerated onset of neural encoding mechanisms supporting the integration of semantic information with the event input.