| Literature DB >> 28550656 |
Johanne Tromp1,2, David Peeters3, Antje S Meyer3,4, Peter Hagoort3,4.
Abstract
When we comprehend language, we often do this in rich settings where we can use many cues to understand what someone is saying. However, it has traditionally been difficult to design experiments with rich three-dimensional contexts that resemble our everyday environments, while maintaining control over the linguistic and nonlinguistic information that is available. Here we test the validity of combining electroencephalography (EEG) and virtual reality (VR) to overcome this problem. We recorded electrophysiological brain activity during language processing in a well-controlled three-dimensional virtual audiovisual environment. Participants were immersed in a virtual restaurant while wearing EEG equipment. In the restaurant, participants encountered virtual restaurant guests. Each guest was seated at a separate table with an object on it (e.g., a plate with salmon). The restaurant guest would then produce a sentence (e.g., "I just ordered this salmon."). The noun in the spoken sentence could either match ("salmon") or mismatch ("pasta") the object on the table, creating a situation in which the auditory information was either appropriate or inappropriate in the visual context. We observed a reliable N400 effect as a consequence of the mismatch. This finding validates the combined use of VR and EEG as a tool to study the neurophysiological mechanisms of everyday language comprehension in rich, ecologically valid settings.Entities:
Keywords: EEG; Language comprehension; Language processing; N400; Virtual reality
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28550656 PMCID: PMC5880850 DOI: 10.3758/s13428-017-0911-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Res Methods ISSN: 1554-351X
Fig. 1Screenshot of the virtual environment
Fig. 2Equidistant electrode montage. The electrode sites displayed in Fig. 3 are circled (LA, left anterior; RA, right anterior; M, midline; LP, left posterior; RP, right posterior). The five regions used in the analysis are highlighted in different colors (LA = red; RA = orange; M = gray; LP = dark blue; RP = light blue)
Fig. 3Grand-average waveforms time-locked to the onset of the critical nouns in the match and mismatch conditions. The topographic plots display the voltage differences between the two conditions (mismatch – match) in the three different time windows