6533b83afe1ef96bd12a7c06

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Pitch accent type affects the N400 during referential processing

Petra B. SchumacherStefan Baumann

subject

AdultMaleTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectNeuropsychological TestsReferentYoung AdultMental ProcessesPerceptionStress (linguistics)HumansSpeechSemantic memoryPitch PerceptionProsodyEvoked Potentialsmedia_commonCommunicationLanguage TestsPitch accentbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceBrainElectroencephalographyCognitionN400Acoustic StimulationSpeech PerceptionFemalePsychologybusinessCognitive psychology

description

Discourse processing depends on semantic memory as well as maintaining and updating of a mental model. Using event-related potentials, we investigated how a referent's information status (new, accessible, given) is processed in combination with three different prosodic realizations (an appropriate accent and two inappropriate accents). The data reveal a biphasic N400-late positivity pattern, indicating that prosodic information affects an early discourse linking stage, during which prominence information reflecting a referent's accessibility is computed (N400), and a later discourse updating stage, during which conflicts between prosodic information and a referent's actual information status are detected (late positivity). Crucially, the data show that the N400 is not only sensitive to lexico-semantic relations but also to discourse accessibility induced by prosodic cues.

https://doi.org/10.1097/wnr.0b013e328339874a