Literature DB >> 14527578

Automatic processing of grammar in the human brain as revealed by the mismatch negativity.

Friedemann Pulvermüller1, Yury Shtyrov.   

Abstract

The Mismatch Negativity (MMN), a neurophysiological indicator of cognitive processing, was used to investigate grammatical processes in the absence of focused attention to language. Subjects instructed to watch a silent video film and to ignore speech stimuli heard grammatical and ungrammatical spoken word strings that were physically identical up to a divergence point where they differed between each other by a minimal acoustic event, the presence or the absence of a final -s sound. The sentence we come was presented as a rare deviant stimulus against the background of frequently occurring ungrammatical strings, and, in a different experiment, the ungrammatical string *we comes was the deviant in the reverse design. To control for effects related to differences between the critical words, come and comes, control conditions were used in which the same words were presented out of linguistic context. At 100-150 ms after the divergence point, the ungrammatical deviant stimulus elicited a larger MMN than the correct sentence at left-anterior recording sites. This difference was not seen under the out-of-context conditions. In the time range 100-400 ms after stimulus divergence, a spatiotemporal pattern of grammatically related effects was documented by statistically significant interactions of the word and context variables. Minimum-Norm Current Estimates of the cortical sources of the grammaticality effects revealed a main source in the left frontal cortex. We use a neurobiological model of serial order processing to provide a tentative explanation for the data.

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Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 14527578     DOI: 10.1016/s1053-8119(03)00261-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  22 in total

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2.  Brain potentials to sexually suggestive whistles show meaning modulates the mismatch negativity.

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Review 3.  Understanding in an instant: neurophysiological evidence for mechanistic language circuits in the brain.

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4.  Sensitivity to syntax in visual cortex.

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Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2009-01-03

5.  Different ERP profiles for learning rules over consonants and vowels.

Authors:  Júlia Monte-Ordoño; Juan M Toro
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2017-02-20       Impact factor: 3.139

6.  Multiple routes for compound word processing in the brain: evidence from EEG.

Authors:  Lucy J MacGregor; Yury Shtyrov
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2013-06-22       Impact factor: 2.381

7.  Frontal and superior temporal auditory processing abnormalities in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Yu-Han Chen; J Christopher Edgar; Mingxiong Huang; Michael A Hunter; Emerson Epstein; Breannan Howell; Brett Y Lu; Juan Bustillo; Gregory A Miller; José M Cañive
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8.  Time-driven effects on processing grammatical agreement.

Authors:  Mikael Roll; Sabine Gosselke; Magnus Lindgren; Merle Horne
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-12-30

9.  A beamformer analysis of MEG data reveals frontal generators of the musically elicited mismatch negativity.

Authors:  Claudia Lappe; Olaf Steinsträter; Christo Pantev
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-04-09       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Cortical mapping of mismatch negativity with deviance detection property in rat.

Authors:  Tomoyo Isoguchi Shiramatsu; Ryohei Kanzaki; Hirokazu Takahashi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-12       Impact factor: 3.240

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