Prosody-driven Sentence Processing: An Event-related Brain Potential Study
- 1 March 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by MIT Press in Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
- Vol. 17 (3) , 407-421
- https://doi.org/10.1162/0898929053279450
Abstract
Four experiments systematically investigating the brain's response to the perception of sentences containing differing amounts of linguistic information are presented. Spoken language generally provides various levels of information for the interpretation of the incoming speech stream. Here, we focus on the processing of prosodic phrasing, especially on its interplay with phonemic, semantic, and syntactic information. An event-related brain potential (ERP) paradigm was chosen to record the on-line responses to the processing of sentences containing major prosodic boundaries. For the perception of these prosodic boundaries, the so-called closure positive shift (CPS) has been manifested as a reliable and replicable ERP component. It has mainly been shown to correlate to major intonational phrasing in spoken language. However, to define this component as exclusively relying on the prosodic information in the speech stream, it is necessary to systematically reduce the linguistic content of the stimulus material. This was done by creating quasi-natural sentence material with decreasing semantic, syntactic, and phonemic information (i.e., jabberwocky sentences, in which all content words were replaced by meaningless words; pseudoword sentences, in which all function and all content words are replaced by meaningless words; and delexicalized sentences, hummed intonation contour of a sentence removing all segmental content). The finding that a CPS was identified in all sentence types in correlation to the perception of their major intonational boundaries clearly indicates that this effect is driven purely by prosody.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- FMRI reveals brain regions mediating slow prosodic modulations in spoken sentencesHuman Brain Mapping, 2002
- The neural bases of prosody: Insights from lesion studies and neuroimagingAphasiology, 1999
- Production of affective and linguistic prosody by brain-damaged patientsAphasiology, 1997
- Prosodic Breaks and Attachment Decisions in Sentence ParsingLanguage and Cognitive Processes, 1996
- The Parsing of ProsodyLanguage and Cognitive Processes, 1996
- Disruption of prosody after frontal lobe seizures in the non-dominant hemisphereAphasiology, 1995
- Prosodic Effects in Minimal AttachmentThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1992
- The interpretation of prosodic patterns at points of syntactic structure ambiguity: Evidence for cue trading relationsJournal of Memory and Language, 1991
- Parsing complements: Comments on the generality of the principle of minimal attachmentLanguage and Cognitive Processes, 1989
- The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventoryNeuropsychologia, 1971