Corrigendum to 'Electrophysiological signatures of masked transposition priming in a same-different task: Evidence with strings of letters vs. pseudoletters' [Neurosci. Lett. 515 (2012) 71-76]
Two images were inadvertently left out of the 2nd paragraph of the previously published article. Please see corrected paragraph and images below.In a series of behavioural experiments, Garcia-Orza et al. [10] examined whether masked transposition priming is specific to letter processing. They employed a masked priming same-different matching task in which participants were required to press a button if cue and target were the same and to press another button if cue and target were different (see [15,16] for reviews of this task). A briefly presented transposed-letter masked prime was presented immediately before the target stimulus. Garcia-Orza et al. ([10] Experiments 1-4]) found a masked transposition priming effect for "same" trials with familiar alphanumeric stimuli: pronounceable pseudowords, non-pronounceable nonwords (i.e., strings of consonants), digit strings, and symbol strings. To assess if masked transposition priming occurs with non-familiar alphanumeric-like objects, Garcia-Orza et al.
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