| Literature DB >> 24672499 |
Lotte Schoot1, Laura Menenti2, Peter Hagoort2, Katrien Segaert2.
Abstract
We report on an functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) syntactic priming experiment in which we measure brain activity for participants who communicate with another participant outside the scanner. We investigated whether syntactic processing during overt language production and comprehension is influenced by having a (shared) goal to communicate. Although theory suggests this is true, the nature of this influence remains unclear. Two hypotheses are tested: (i) syntactic priming effects (fMRI and behavioral) are stronger for participants in the communicative context than for participants doing the same experiment in a non-communicative context, and (ii) syntactic priming magnitude (behavioral) is correlated with the syntactic priming magnitude of the speaker's communicative partner. Results showed that across conditions, participants were faster to produce sentences with repeated syntax, relative to novel syntax. This behavioral result converged with the fMRI data: we found repetition suppression effects in the left insula extending into left inferior frontal gyrus (BA 47/45), left middle temporal gyrus (BA 21), left inferior parietal cortex (BA 40), left precentral gyrus (BA 6), bilateral precuneus (BA 7), bilateral supplementary motor cortex (BA 32/8), and right insula (BA 47). We did not find support for the first hypothesis: having a communicative intention does not increase the magnitude of syntactic priming effects (either in the brain or in behavior) per se. We did find support for the second hypothesis: if speaker A is strongly/weakly primed by speaker B, then speaker B is primed by speaker A to a similar extent. We conclude that syntactic processing is influenced by being in a communicative context, and that the nature of this influence is bi-directional: speakers are influenced by each other.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; communication; comprehension; fMRI; overt production; syntactic priming; syntax
Year: 2014 PMID: 24672499 PMCID: PMC3957420 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Whole brain analysis – Results for the main effect of Syntactic Repetition (no syntactic repetition > syntactic repetition) and the interactions Syntactic Repetition * Context and Syntactic Repetition * Context * Speaker Switch.
| Anatomical label | BA | Global and local maxima | Cluster-level | Voxel-level | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Left inferior parietal | 40 | -42 | -44 | 40 | 928 | <0.001 | 5.37 |
| Left inferior parietal | 40 | -52 | -36 | 46 | 4.68 | ||
| Left superior parietal | 7 | -32 | -62 | 48 | 3.54 | ||
| Left precentral | 6 | -38 | 2 | 44 | 424 | <0.001 | 5.16 |
| Left precentral | 6 | -46 | 0 | 42 | 4.30 | ||
| Left precentral | 6 | -46 | 8 | 42 | 4.20 | ||
| Left precuneus | 7 | -6 | -70 | 40 | 333 | <0.002 | 5.02 |
| Right precuneus | 7 | 8 | -72 | 40 | 3.71 | ||
| Right precuneus | 7 | 14 | -58 | 42 | 3.56 | ||
| Left supplementary motor area | 32/8 | -8 | 22 | 46 | 408 | <0.001 | 4.98 |
| Right supplementary motor area | 32/8 | 6 | 18 | 48 | 4.19 | ||
| Right anterior cingulum | 32 | 14 | 36 | 26 | 3.33 | ||
| Left insula | 47 | -38 | 20 | -6 | 895 | <0.001 | 5.18 |
| Left inferior frontal pars prbitalis | 47 | -32 | 30 | -4 | 4.69 | ||
| Left inferior frontal pars triangularis | 45 | -48 | 34 | 0 | 3.85 | ||
| Left middle temporal | 21 | -50 | -44 | 2 | 387 | <0.001 | 4.54 |
| Left middle temporal | 21 | -54 | -46 | 4 | 4.33 | ||
| Left inferior temporal | 37 | -58 | -54 | -6 | 3.64 | ||
| Right insula | 47 | 36 | 24 | 0 | 452 | <0.001 | 4.98 |
| No significant clusters | |||||||
| No significant clusters | |||||||