Beyond the sentence given
Top Cited Papers
- 3 April 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 362 (1481) , 801-811
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2007.2089
Abstract
A central and influential idea among researchers of language is that our language faculty is organized according to Fregean compositionality, which states that the meaning of an utterance is a function of the meaning of its parts and of the syntactic rules by which these parts are combined. Since the domain of syntactic rules is the sentence, the implication of this idea is that language interpretation takes place in a two-step fashion. First, the meaning of a sentence is computed. In a second step, the sentence meaning is integrated with information from prior discourse, world knowledge, information about the speaker and semantic information from extra-linguistic domains such as co-speech gestures or the visual world. Here, we present results from recordings of event-related brain potentials that are inconsistent with this classical two-step model of language interpretation. Our data support a one-step model in which knowledge about the context and the world, concomitant information from other modalities, and the speaker are brought to bear immediately, by the same fast-acting brain system that combines the meanings of individual words into a message-level representation. Underlying the one-step model is the immediacy assumption, according to which all available information will immediately be used to co-determine the interpretation of the speaker's message. Functional magnetic resonance imaging data that we collected indicate that Broca's area plays an important role in semantic unification. Language comprehension involves the rapid incorporation of information in a 'single unification space', coming from a broader range of cognitive domains than presupposed in the standard two-step model of interpretation.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- On sense and reference: Examining the functional neuroanatomy of referential processingNeuroImage, 2007
- The simpler syntax hypothesisTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2006
- Event-related brain potentials elicited by syntactic anomalyPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Précis of Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution,Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2003
- The effects of common ground and perspective on domains of referential interpretationJournal of Memory and Language, 2003
- Meaning and modality: Influences of context, semantic memory organization, and perceptual predictability on picture processing.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2001
- Situation models in language comprehension and memory.Psychological Bulletin, 1998
- The lexical nature of syntactic ambiguity resolution.Psychological Review, 1994
- On not being led up the garden path: the use of context by the psychological syntax processorPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1985
- A theory of reading: From eye fixations to comprehension.Psychological Review, 1980