Literature DB >> 10906378

ERP effects of listening to speech compared to reading: the P600/SPS to syntactic violations in spoken sentences and rapid serial visual presentation.

P Hagoort1, C M Brown.   

Abstract

In this study, event-related brain potential effects of speech processing are obtained and compared to similar effects in sentence reading. In two experiments sentences were presented that contained three different types of grammatical violations. In one experiment sentences were presented word by word at a rate of four words per second. The grammatical violations elicited a Syntactic Positive Shift (P600/SPS), 500 ms after the onset of the word that rendered the sentence ungrammatical. The P600/SPS consisted of two phases, an early phase with a relatively equal anterior-posterior distribution and a later phase with a strong posterior distribution. We interpret the first phase as an indication of structural integration complexity, and the second phase as an indication of failing parsing operations and/or an attempt at reanalysis. In the second experiment the same syntactic violations were presented in sentences spoken at a normal rate and with normal intonation. These violations elicited a P600/SPS with the same onset as was observed for the reading of these sentences. In addition two of the three violations showed a preceding frontal negativity, most clearly over the left hemisphere.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10906378     DOI: 10.1016/s0028-3932(00)00053-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  57 in total

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6.  An ERP study of syntactic processing in English and nonsense sentences.

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7.  An fMRI study of canonical and noncanonical word order in German.

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8.  Grammatical number agreement processing using the visual half-field paradigm: an event-related brain potential study.

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9.  An ERP study of regular and irregular English past tense inflection.

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10.  Modulations in oscillatory activity with amplitude asymmetry can produce cognitively relevant event-related responses.

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