6533b7dcfe1ef96bd12720f8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Topicality matters: Position-specific demands on Chinese discourse processing

Petra B. SchumacherYu-chen Hung

subject

AdultMaleChinaCommunicationLanguage processorbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceInformation processingN400LinguisticsCognitionHumansPosition (finance)FemaleElement (criminal law)businessDiscourse processingPsychologyEvoked PotentialsUtteranceLanguage

description

We report an event-related potential study designed to explore the nature of context-induced topicality in Chinese discourse processing. Topic is what an utterance is about and represents the most prominent discourse element, which occurs sentence-initially in Chinese. We tested question-answer pairs consisting of topic and non-topic questions followed by different continuations (Topic-Continuity, Topic-Shift, Novel-Topic). ERPs were measured at distinct sentential positions and revealed that sentence-initially information processing is guided by topicality, which affects N400 and Late Positivity effects alike. In non-initial positions, the given-new distinction is the dominant principle, also modulating N400 and Late Positivity. The language processor hence utilizes a few core operations for information processing that depend on position-specific constraints.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2012.01.013