학술논문

Semantic knowledge in williams syndrome: Insights from comparing behavioural and brain processes in false memory tasks
Document Type
Conference
Source
2007 IEEE 6th International Conference on Development and Learning Development and Learning, 2007. ICDL 2007. IEEE 6th International Conference on. :48-52 Jul, 2007
Subject
General Topics for Engineers
Engineering Profession
Testing
Delay
Laboratories
Neuroscience
Genetics
Enterprise resource planning
Pattern recognition
Neural pathways
Autism
Recruitment
Williams syndrome
semantic knowledge
context use
false memory
event-related potentials
Language
ISSN
2161-9476
Abstract
This study attempts to understand the relationship between use of context and semantic knowledge in the genetic disorder, Williams syndrome (WS). Earlier work had arrived at discrepant results, suggesting either near normal semantic priming [10], or unusual lexical organization [5] and atypical sentence integration [8] in this clinical group. To address these discrepant findings, we used two methodologies with an auditory false memory paradigm, and measured behavioural and neurophysiological (ERP) responses from three groups: children and adults with WS, Mental-Age matched normal children, and normal adults. While the behavioural data suggested that individuals with WS revealed a similar pattern of recognition as both groups of controls for words with semantic relatedness, their neurophysiological correlates suggested a different pattern. Our findings indicate that WS proficient compensatory behaviour camouFlages a deviant neural pathway in the use of contextual cues. Our results also point to neurological changes during typical development, since typically developing children showed a distin54ctive pattern from our adult participants. Overall, our findings suggest that semantic organization develops slowly over typical development, and atypically in the Williams syndrome.