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A rose by any other name: Long term memory structure and sentence processing
by Kara D. Federmeier, Marta Kutas - Journal of Memory and language , 1999
"... The effects of sentential context and semantic memory structure during on-line sentence processing were examined by recording event-related brain potentials as individuals read pairs of sentences for comprehension. The first sentence established an expectation for a particular exemplar of a semantic ..."
Abstract - Cited by 84 (13 self) - Add to MetaCart
The effects of sentential context and semantic memory structure during on-line sentence processing were examined by recording event-related brain potentials as individuals read pairs of sentences for comprehension. The first sentence established an expectation for a particular exemplar of a semantic category, while the second ended with (1) that expected exemplar, (2) an unexpected exemplar from the same (expected) category, or (3) an unexpected item from a different (unexpected) category. Expected endings elicited a positivity between 250 and 550 ms while all unexpected endings elicited an N400, which was significantly smaller to items from the expected category. This N400 reduction varied with the strength of the contextually induced expectation: unexpected, categorically related endings elicited smaller N400s in more constraining contexts, despite their poorer fit to context (lower plausibility). This pattern of effects is best explained as reflecting the impact of context-independent long-term memory structure on sentence processing. The results thus suggest that physical and functional similarities that hold between objects in the world—i.e., category structure—influence neural organization and, in turn, routine language comprehension processes. © 1999 Academic Press Key Words: sentence processing; categorization; event-related potentials; N400. At its heart, language comprehension involves
N400-like Magnetoencephalography Responses Modulated by Semantic Context, Word Frequency, and Lexical Class in Sentences
by Eric Halgren, Rupali P. Dhond, Natalie Christensen, Cyma Van Petten, Ksenija Marinkovic, Jeffrey D. Lewine, Anders M. Dale , 2002
"... Words have been found to elicit a negative potential at the scalp peaking at �400 ms that is strongly modulated by semantic context. The current study used whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG) as male subjects read sentences ending with semantically congruous or incongruous words. Compared with c ..."
Abstract - Cited by 48 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
Words have been found to elicit a negative potential at the scalp peaking at �400 ms that is strongly modulated by semantic context. The current study used whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG) as male subjects read sentences ending with semantically congruous or incongruous words. Compared with congruous words, sentence-terminal incongruous words consistently evoked a large magnetic field over the left hemisphere, peaking at �450 ms. Source modeling at this latency with conventional equivalent current dipoles (ECDs) placed the N400m generator in or near the left superior temporal sulcus. A distributed solution constrained to the cortical surface suggested a sequence of differential activation, beginning in Wernicke’s area at �250 ms, spreading to anterior temporal sites at �270 ms, to Broca’s area by
The Brain Basis of Syntactic Processes: Functional Imaging and Lesion Studies
by Angela D. Friederici, Sonja A. Kotz - NeuroImage
"... language comprehension can be subdivided into three processing steps: initial structure building, semantic integration, and late syntactic integration. The two syntactic processing phases are correlated with two distinct components in the event-related brain potential, namely an early left anterior ..."
Abstract - Cited by 44 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
language comprehension can be subdivided into three processing steps: initial structure building, semantic integration, and late syntactic integration. The two syntactic processing phases are correlated with two distinct components in the event-related brain potential, namely an early left anterior negativity (ELAN) and a late centroparietal positivity (P600). Moreover, ERP findings from healthy adults suggest that early structure-building processes as reflected by the ELAN are independent of semantic processes. fMRI results have revealed that semantic and syntactic processes are supported by separable temporofrontal networks, with the syntactic processes involving the left superior temporal gyrus (STG), the left frontal operculum, and the basal ganglia (BG) in particular. MEG data from healthy adults have indicated that the left anterior temporal region and the left inferior frontal region subserve the early structure building processes. ERP data from patients with lesions in the left anterior temporal region and from patients with lesions in the left inferior frontal gyrus support this view, as these patients do not demonstrate an ELAN, although they do demonstrate a P600. Further results from patients with BG dysfunction suggest that parts of this subcortical structure are involved in late syntactic integrational processes. The data from the different experiments lead to the notion of separable brain systems responsible for early and late syntactic processes, with the former being subserved by the inferior frontal gyrus and the anterior STG and the latter being supported by the BG and more posterior portions of the STG. © 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Who said what? An event-related potential investigation of source and item memory
by Ava J. Senkfor, Cyma Van Petten - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition , 1998
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