Literature DB >> 29775775

Knowledge and learning of verb biases in amnesia.

Rachel Ryskin1, Zhenghan Qi2, Natalie V Covington3, Melissa Duff3, Sarah Brown-Schmidt4.   

Abstract

Verb bias-the co-occurrence frequencies between a verb and the syntactic structures it may appear with-is a critical and reliable linguistic cue for online sentence processing. In particular, listeners use this information to disambiguate sentences with multiple potential syntactic parses (e.g., Feel the frog with the feather.). Further, listeners dynamically update their representations of specific verbs in the face of new evidence about verb-structure co-occurrence. Yet, little is known about the biological memory systems that support the use and dynamic updating of verb bias. We propose that hippocampal-dependent declarative (relational) memory represents a likely candidate system because it has been implicated in the flexible binding of relational co-occurrences and in statistical learning. We explore this question by testing patients with severe and selective deficits in declarative memory (anterograde amnesia), and demographically matched healthy participants, in their on-line interpretation of ambiguous sentences and the ability to update their verb bias with experience. We find that (1) patients and their healthy counterparts use existing verb bias to successfully interpret on-line ambiguity, however (2) unlike healthy young adults, neither group updated these biases in response to recent exposure. These findings demonstrate that using existing representations of verb bias does not necessitate involvement of the declarative memory system, but leave open the question of whether the ability to update representations of verb-specific biases requires hippocampal engagement.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Eye-tracking; Hippocampal amnesia; Language processing; Syntactic ambiguity

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29775775      PMCID: PMC6048964          DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2018.04.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Lang        ISSN: 0093-934X            Impact factor:   2.381


  56 in total

1.  Electrophysiological and behavioral evidence of syntactic priming in sentence comprehension.

Authors:  Kristen M Tooley; Matthew J Traxler; Tamara Y Swaab
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 3.051

2.  The Necessity of the Hippocampus for Statistical Learning.

Authors:  Natalie V Covington; Sarah Brown-Schmidt; Melissa C Duff
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2018-01-08       Impact factor: 3.225

3.  The Psychophysics Toolbox.

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4.  Complementary learning systems within the hippocampus: a neural network modelling approach to reconciling episodic memory with statistical learning.

Authors:  Anna C Schapiro; Nicholas B Turk-Browne; Matthew M Botvinick; Kenneth A Norman
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2017-01-05       Impact factor: 6.237

5.  Resolving attachment ambiguities with multiple constraints.

Authors:  M Spivey-Knowlton; J C Sedivy
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  1995-06

6.  Context effects in syntactic ambiguity resolution: discourse and semantic influences in parsing reduced relative clauses.

Authors:  M J Spivey-Knowlton; J C Trueswell; M K Tanenhaus
Journal:  Can J Exp Psychol       Date:  1993-06

7.  Not so fast: hippocampal amnesia slows word learning despite successful fast mapping.

Authors:  David E Warren; Melissa C Duff
Journal:  Hippocampus       Date:  2014-04-29       Impact factor: 3.899

Review 8.  Item, context and relational episodic encoding in humans.

Authors:  Lila Davachi
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2006-11-09       Impact factor: 6.627

9.  Aging and individual differences in binding during sentence understanding: evidence from temporary and global syntactic attachment ambiguities.

Authors:  Brennan R Payne; Sarah Grison; Xuefei Gao; Kiel Christianson; Daniel G Morrow; Elizabeth A L Stine-Morrow
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2013-11-30

10.  Experience and sentence processing: statistical learning and relative clause comprehension.

Authors:  Justine B Wells; Morten H Christiansen; David S Race; Daniel J Acheson; Maryellen C MacDonald
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  2008-10-14       Impact factor: 3.468

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