Search results for "N400"

showing 10 items of 56 documents

Pitch accent type affects the N400 during referential processing

2010

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 statu…

AdultMaleTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectNeuropsychological TestsReferentYoung AdultMental ProcessesPerceptionStress (linguistics)HumansSpeechSemantic memoryPitch PerceptionProsodyEvoked Potentialsmedia_commonCommunicationLanguage TestsPitch accentbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceBrainElectroencephalographyCognitionN400Acoustic StimulationSpeech PerceptionFemalePsychologybusinessCognitive psychologyNeuroReport
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Conflicts in language processing: A new perspective on the N400-P600 distinction

2011

Conflicts in language processing often correlate with late positive event-related brain potentials (ERPs), particularly when they are induced by inconsistencies between different information types (e.g. syntactic and thematic/plausibility information). However, under certain circumstances, similar sentence-level interpretation conflicts (inanimate subjects) engender negativity effects (N400s) instead. The present ERP study was designed to shed light on this inconsistency. In previous studies showing monophasic positivities (P600s), the conflict was irresolvable and induced via a verb. whereas N400s were elicited by resolvable, argument-induced conflicts. Here, we therefore examined irresolv…

AdultMaleanimacyCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectconflictExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyVerbevent-related potentialsConflict PsychologicalBehavioral NeuroscienceYoung AdultArgumentwell-formednessHumansP600N400Evoked Potentialsmedia_commonLanguageP600Perspective (graphical)ElectroencephalographycategorizationAgreementN400LinguisticsCategorizationReadingData Interpretation StatisticalFemaleAnimacyPsychologyComprehensionPhotic StimulationPsychomotor Performancelanguage comprehensionactor
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Gesture's body orientation modulates the N400 for visual sentences primed by gestures

2020

Abstract Body orientation of gesture entails social‐communicative intention, and may thus influence how gestures are perceived and comprehended together with auditory speech during face‐to‐face communication. To date, despite the emergence of neuroscientific literature on the role of body orientation on hand action perception, limited studies have directly investigated the role of body orientation in the interaction between gesture and language. To address this research question, we carried out an electroencephalography (EEG) experiment presenting to participants (n = 21) videos of frontal and lateral communicative hand gestures of 5 s (e.g., raising a hand), followed by visually presented …

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectPrefrontal CortexElectroencephalography050105 experimental psychologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinebody orientationKinesicsPerceptionmedicineHumansN4000501 psychology and cognitive sciencesRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingPrefrontal cortexsemanticsEvoked PotentialsResearch Articlesmedia_commonbeta oscillationsPsycholinguisticsGesturesRadiological and Ultrasound Technologymedicine.diagnostic_testSocial perception05 social sciencessocial perceptionElectroencephalographyN400ComprehensionAlpha RhythmPattern Recognition VisualReadingNeurologygestureFemaleNeurology (clinical)AnatomyBeta RhythmPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerySentenceResearch ArticleCognitive psychologyGestureHuman Brain Mapping
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An electrophysiological study of dyslexic and control adults in a sentence reading task.

2002

Event-related potentials and cued-recall performance were used to compare dyslexic and control adult subjects. Sentences that ended either congruously or incongruously were presented visually, one word at a time, at fast (stimulus-onset-asynchrony (SOA)=100 ms) or slow (SOA=700 ms) rates of presentation. Results revealed (1) a large effect of presentation rate that started with the N1-P2 components and lasted for the entire recording period, (2) larger N400 components for dyslexic than control subjects, at slow presentation rates, to both congruous and incongruous endings and (3) a large ERPs difference related to memory (Dm effect) that did not differentiate controls from dyslexics but was…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyElectroencephalographyAudiologyDevelopmental psychologyDyslexiaMental ProcessesmedicineHumansmedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral NeuroscienceMemoriaInformation processingDyslexiaCognitionElectroencephalographymedicine.diseaseN400ElectrophysiologyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyReadingCase-Control StudiesEvoked Potentials VisualPsychologySentenceBiological psychology
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An alternative perspective on “semantic P600” effects in language comprehension

2008

Abstract The literature on the electrophysiology of language comprehension has recently seen a very prominent discussion of “semantic P600” effects, which have been observed, for example, in sentences involving an implausible thematic role assignment to an argument that would be a highly plausible filler for a different thematic role of the same verb. These findings have sparked a discussion about underlying properties of the language comprehension architecture, as they have generally been viewed as a challenge to established models of language processing and specifically to the notion that syntax precedes semantics in the comprehension process. In this paper, we review the literature on se…

Cognitive scienceCommunicationInterpretation (logic)business.industryComputer scienceGeneral NeuroscienceElectroencephalographyCognitionVerbSemanticsSyntaxSemanticsComprehensionArgumentHumansNeurology (clinical)ComprehensionbusinessAnimacylanguage comprehension; N400; P600; syntax; semantics; semantic reversal anomalies; semantic P600; animacy; plausibility; extended Argument Dependency ModelEvoked PotentialsBrain Research Reviews
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Are Vowels and Consonants Processed Differently? Event-related Potential Evidence with a Delayed Letter Paradigm

2008

Abstract To investigate the neural bases of consonant and vowel processing, event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded while participants read words and pseudowords in a lexical decision task. The stimuli were displayed in three different conditions: (i) simultaneous presentation of all letters (baseline condition); (ii) presentation of all letters, except that two internal consonants were delayed for 50 msec (consonants-delayed condition); and (iii) presentation of all letters, except that two internal vowels were delayed for 50 msec (vowels-delayed condition). The behavioral results showed that, for words, response times in the consonants-delayed condition were longer than in the vowel…

ConsonantMalemedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive NeuroscienceAudiologyVocabularyYoung AdultDiscrimination PsychologicalEvent-related potentialVowelLexical decision taskmedicineReaction TimeHumansEvoked PotentialsBrain MappingNegativity effectElectroencephalographyLinguisticsN400ReadingWord recognitionSpeech PerceptionFemalePsychologyPhotic Stimulation
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Early ERP Evidence for Children’s and Adult’s Sensitivity to Scalar Implicatures Triggered by Existential Quantifiers (Some)

2021

How quickly do children and adults interpret scalar lexical items in speech processing? The current study examined interpretation of the scalar terms some vs. all in contexts where either the stronger (some = not all) or the weaker interpretation was permissible (some allows all). Children and adults showed increased negative deflections in brain activity following the word some in some-infelicitous versus some-felicitous contexts. This effect was found as early as 100 ms across central electrode sites (in children), and 300–500 ms across left frontal, fronto-central, and centro-parietal electrode sites (in children and adults). These results strongly suggest that young children (aged betwe…

Correctionpragmatic inferencingbehavioral disciplines and activitiesimplicatures in language acquisitionBF1-990implicaturePsychologyN400developmental pragmaticspragmaticsGeneral Psychologyscalar implicatureOriginal Researchspeech processingFrontiers in Psychology
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Age-Related Changes in Predictive Capacity Versus Internal Model Adaptability: Electrophysiological Evidence that Individual Differences Outweigh Eff…

2015

Hierarchical predictive coding has been identified as a possible unifying principle of brain function, and recent work in cognitive neuroscience has examined how it may be affected by age related changes. Using language comprehension as a test case, the present study aimed to dissociate age-related changes in prediction generation versus internal model adaptation following a prediction error. Event related brain potentials (ERPs) were measured in a group of older adults (60-81 years; n = 40) as they read sentences of the form "The opposite of black is white/yellow/nice." Replicating previous work in young adults, results showed a target related P300 for the expected antonym ("white"; an eff…

Geriatrics & GerontologyCognitive Neuroscienceindividual alpha frequencyAdaptation (eye)Cognitive neuroscienceAffect (psychology)event-related potentialslcsh:RC321-571Developmental psychologyEvent-related potentialN400Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceYoung adultP300predictive codinglcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal ResearchagingNeurosciencesN400ComprehensionAgeinglate positivityNeurosciences & NeurologyPsychologyNeurosciencelanguage comprehensionFrontiers in Aging Neuroscience
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Internal vs. external R&D teams: Evidences from the Italian wine industry

2021

R&D teams' internationalization attracts interests from different research-streams. However, the decision on what type of R&D structure is more convenient to invest in may differ, based on several factors, such as risk-taking propensity and internal resource availability. With an aim to enrich the extant literature and to provide practical insights for managers working in the wine industry, this case study explores the determinants of an Italian family-owned winery that attempts to keep a balance between its internal and external R&D teams' decision, using an integrated theoretical framework based on the transaction costs and the resource-based view theory. The optimal R&D s…

Knowledge managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectCase studyN500Human capitalUnit (housing)Resource (project management)Settore AGR/01 - Economia Ed Estimo Rurale0502 economics and businessResource-based viewHuman capitalN400N100N200Reputationmedia_commonMarketingTransaction costTransaction costsTangible and intangible resourcesbusiness.industry05 social sciencesWineryInternationalizationIn-house investments050211 marketingbusinessResource-based view050203 business & managementReputation
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Constraints on ontology changing complexation processes: Evidence from event-related brain potentials

2010

This paper investigates complex anaphoric reference (i.e., when an anaphor refers to a propositionally structured referent). Complex anaphors (e.g., this process, this event) differ in their ontological feature setup, and the ontological type assigned to a referent can change due to the lexical meaning of the complex anaphor. Previous research has proposed that such changes have to comply with an ontological ‘abstractness constraint’ restricting the direction of ontological change. We present an event-related potential study that provides evidence that violations of the abstractness constraint result in processing costs. The data reveal that violating this constraint by shifting the referen…

Linguistics and LanguageAbstract typeExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLexical definitionReferentLanguage and LinguisticsN400LinguisticsEducationFeature (linguistics)Constraint (information theory)OntologyPsychologySentenceCognitive psychologyLanguage and Cognitive Processes
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