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How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials

BACKGROUND: A crucial question for understanding sentence comprehension is the openness of syntactic and semantic processes for other sources of information. Using event-related potentials in a dual task paradigm, we had previously found that sentence processing takes into consideration task relevan...

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Autores principales: Schacht, Annekathrin, Martín-Loeches, Manuel, Casado, Pilar, Abdel Rahman, Rasha, Sel, Alejandra, Sommer, Werner
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2840031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20305820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009742
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author Schacht, Annekathrin
Martín-Loeches, Manuel
Casado, Pilar
Abdel Rahman, Rasha
Sel, Alejandra
Sommer, Werner
author_facet Schacht, Annekathrin
Martín-Loeches, Manuel
Casado, Pilar
Abdel Rahman, Rasha
Sel, Alejandra
Sommer, Werner
author_sort Schacht, Annekathrin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A crucial question for understanding sentence comprehension is the openness of syntactic and semantic processes for other sources of information. Using event-related potentials in a dual task paradigm, we had previously found that sentence processing takes into consideration task relevant sentence-external semantic but not syntactic information. In that study, internal and external information both varied within the same linguistic domain—either semantic or syntactic. Here we investigated whether across-domain sentence-external information would impact within-sentence processing. METHODOLOGY: In one condition, adjectives within visually presented sentences of the structure [Det]-[Noun]-[Adjective]-[Verb] were semantically correct or incorrect. Simultaneously with the noun, auditory adjectives were presented that morphosyntactically matched or mismatched the visual adjectives with respect to gender. FINDINGS: As expected, semantic violations within the sentence elicited N400 and P600 components in the ERP. However, these components were not modulated by syntactic matching of the sentence-external auditory adjective. In a second condition, syntactic within-sentence correctness-variations were combined with semantic matching variations between the auditory and the visual adjective. Here, syntactic within-sentence violations elicited a LAN and a P600 that did not interact with semantic matching of the auditory adjective. However, semantic mismatching of the latter elicited a frontocentral positivity, presumably related to an increase in discourse level complexity. CONCLUSION: The current findings underscore the open versus algorithmic nature of semantic and syntactic processing, respectively, during sentence comprehension.
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spelling pubmed-28400312010-03-20 How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials Schacht, Annekathrin Martín-Loeches, Manuel Casado, Pilar Abdel Rahman, Rasha Sel, Alejandra Sommer, Werner PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: A crucial question for understanding sentence comprehension is the openness of syntactic and semantic processes for other sources of information. Using event-related potentials in a dual task paradigm, we had previously found that sentence processing takes into consideration task relevant sentence-external semantic but not syntactic information. In that study, internal and external information both varied within the same linguistic domain—either semantic or syntactic. Here we investigated whether across-domain sentence-external information would impact within-sentence processing. METHODOLOGY: In one condition, adjectives within visually presented sentences of the structure [Det]-[Noun]-[Adjective]-[Verb] were semantically correct or incorrect. Simultaneously with the noun, auditory adjectives were presented that morphosyntactically matched or mismatched the visual adjectives with respect to gender. FINDINGS: As expected, semantic violations within the sentence elicited N400 and P600 components in the ERP. However, these components were not modulated by syntactic matching of the sentence-external auditory adjective. In a second condition, syntactic within-sentence correctness-variations were combined with semantic matching variations between the auditory and the visual adjective. Here, syntactic within-sentence violations elicited a LAN and a P600 that did not interact with semantic matching of the auditory adjective. However, semantic mismatching of the latter elicited a frontocentral positivity, presumably related to an increase in discourse level complexity. CONCLUSION: The current findings underscore the open versus algorithmic nature of semantic and syntactic processing, respectively, during sentence comprehension. Public Library of Science 2010-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2840031/ /pubmed/20305820 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009742 Text en Schacht et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schacht, Annekathrin
Martín-Loeches, Manuel
Casado, Pilar
Abdel Rahman, Rasha
Sel, Alejandra
Sommer, Werner
How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
title How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
title_full How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
title_fullStr How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
title_full_unstemmed How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
title_short How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
title_sort how is sentence processing affected by external semantic and syntactic information? evidence from event-related potentials
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2840031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20305820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009742
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