Literature DB >> 23094319

(De-)accentuation and the process of information status: evidence from event-related brain potentials.

Stefan Baumann1, Petra B Schumacher.   

Abstract

The paper reports on a perception experiment in German that investigated the neuro-cognitive processing of information structural concepts and their prosodic marking using event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Experimental conditions controlled the information status (given vs. new) of referring and non-referring target expressions (nouns vs. adjectives) and were elicited via context sentences, which did not - unlike most previous ERP studies in the field--trigger an explicit focus expectation. Target utterances displayed prosodic realizations of the critical words which differed in accent position and accent type. Electrophysiological results showed an effect of information status, maximally distributed over posterior sites, displaying a biphasic N400--Late Positivity pattern for new information. We claim that this pattern reflects increased processing demands associated with new information, with the N400 indicating enhanced costs from linking information with the previous discourse and the Late Positivity indicating the listener's effort to update his/her discourse model. The prosodic manipulation registered more pronounced effects over anterior regions and revealed an enhanced negativity followed by a Late Positivity for deaccentuation, probably also reflecting costs from discourse linking and updating respectively. The data further lend indirect support for the idea that givenness applies not only to referents but also to non-referential expressions ('lexical givenness').

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23094319     DOI: 10.1177/0023830911422184

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lang Speech        ISSN: 0023-8309            Impact factor:   1.500


  3 in total

1.  New is not always costly: evidence from online processing of topic and contrast in Japanese.

Authors:  Luming Wang; Petra B Schumacher
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-06-28

2.  When correction turns positive: processing corrective prosody in Dutch.

Authors:  Diana V Dimitrova; Laurie A Stowe; John C J Hoeks
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-05-14       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Attention allocation in a language with post-focal prominences.

Authors:  Caterina Ventura; Martine Grice; Michelina Savino; Diana Kolev; Ingmar Brilmayer; Petra B Schumacher
Journal:  Neuroreport       Date:  2020-05-22       Impact factor: 1.703

  3 in total

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