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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Text type attribution modulates pre-stimulus alpha power in sentence reading
Mathias ScharingerMatthias SchlesewskyMatthias SchlesewskyWinfried MenninghausStefan BlohmStefan Blohmsubject
Linguistics and LanguageCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAttentional biasStimulus (physiology)050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and Linguistics03 medical and health sciencesSpeech and Hearing0302 clinical medicinereadingReading (process)PerceptionHumansSpeech0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEEGLanguagemedia_common05 social sciencesElectroencephalographyCognitionAnticipationLanguage & CommunicationattentionComprehensionReadingNarrative Cognition & CommunicationoscillationsComprehensionAttributionPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologypoetrydescription
Prior knowledge and context-specific expectations influence the perception of sensory events, e.g., speech, as well as complex higher-order cognitive operations like text reading. Here, we focused on pre-stimulus neural activity during sentence reading to examine text type-dependent attentional bias in anticipation of written stimuli, capitalizing on the functional relevance of brain oscillations in the alpha (8–12 Hz) frequency range. Two sex- and age-matched groups of participants (n = 24 each) read identical sentences on a screen at a fixed per-constituent presentation rate while their electroencephalogram was recorded; the groups were differentially instructed to read “sentences” (genre-neutral condition) or “verses from poems” (poetry condition). Relative alpha power (pre-cue vs. post-cue) in pre-stimulus time windows was greater in the poetry condition than in the genre-neutral condition. This finding constitutes initial evidence for genre-specific cognitive adjustments that precede processing proper, and potentially links current theories of discourse comprehension to current theories of brain function Refereed/Peer-reviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-01-01 | Brain and Language |