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Neural correlates of lexical stress: mismatch negativity reflects fundamental frequency and intensity
Stockholms universitet, Humanistiska fakulteten, Institutionen för lingvistik, Avdelningen för fonetik.ORCID-id: 0000-0003-4355-1390
Stockholms universitet, Humanistiska fakulteten, Institutionen för lingvistik, Avdelningen för fonetik.ORCID-id: 0000-0002-8036-516X
Stockholms universitet, Humanistiska fakulteten, Institutionen för lingvistik, Avdelningen för fonetik.ORCID-id: 0000-0002-0034-0924
2015 (Engelska)Ingår i: NeuroReport, ISSN 0959-4965, E-ISSN 1473-558X, Vol. 26, nr 13, s. 791-796Artikel i tidskrift (Refereegranskat) Published
Abstract [en]

Neural correlates of lexical stress were studied using the mismatch negativity (MMN) component in event-related potentials. The MMN responses were expected to reveal the encoding of stress information into long-term memory and the contributions of prosodic features such as fundamental frequency (F0) and intensity toward lexical access. In a passive oddball paradigm, neural responses to changes in F0, intensity, and in both features together were recorded for words and pseudowords. The findings showed significant differences not only between words and pseudowords but also between prosodic features. Early processing of prosodic information in words was indexed by an intensity-related MMN and an F0-related P200. These effects were stable at right-anterior and mid-anterior regions. At a later latency, MMN responses were recorded for both words and pseudowords at the mid-anterior and posterior regions. The P200 effect observed for F0 at the early latency for words developed into an MMN response. Intensity elicited smaller MMN for pseudowords than for words. Moreover, a larger brain area was recruited for the processing of words than for the processing of pseudowords. These findings suggest earlier and higher sensitivity to prosodic changes in words than in pseudowords, reflecting a language-related process. The present study, therefore, not only establishes neural correlates of lexical stress but also confirms the presence of long-term memory traces for prosodic information in the brain.

Ort, förlag, år, upplaga, sidor
2015. Vol. 26, nr 13, s. 791-796
Nyckelord [en]
event-related potentials, fundamental frequency, intensity, lexical stress, memory trace, mismatch negativity, pitch, prosody
Nationell ämneskategori
Jämförande språkvetenskap och allmän lingvistik
Forskningsämne
lingvistik
Identifikatorer
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-120587DOI: 10.1097/WNR.0000000000000426ISI: 000360303700010OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-120587DiVA, id: diva2:853641
Tillgänglig från: 2015-09-14 Skapad: 2015-09-14 Senast uppdaterad: 2022-03-23Bibliografiskt granskad
Ingår i avhandling
1. Mapping prosody onto the lexicon: Memory traces for lexically specified prosodic information in the brain
Öppna denna publikation i ny flik eller fönster >>Mapping prosody onto the lexicon: Memory traces for lexically specified prosodic information in the brain
2016 (Engelska)Doktorsavhandling, sammanläggning (Övrigt vetenskapligt)
Abstract [en]

Lexical access, the matching of auditory information onto lexical representations in the brain, is a crucial component of online language processing. To understand the nature of lexical access, it is important to identify the kind of acoustic information that is stored in the long-term memory and to study how the brain uses such information. This dissertation investigates the contribution of prosodic information to lexical access and examines language-specific processing mechanisms by studying three typologically distinct languages: English, Turkish, and Swedish. The main research objective is to demonstrate the activation of long-term memory traces for words on the sole basis of prosodic information and to test the accuracy of typological phonological descriptions suggested in the literature by studying electrophysiological measurements of brain activation. A secondary research objective is to evaluate three distinct electrophysiological recording systems. The dissertation is based on three papers, each examining neural responses to prosodic changes in one of the three languages with a different recording system. The first two papers deal directly with the interplay between prosody and the lexicon, and investigate whether prosodic changes activate memory traces associated with segmentally identical but prosodically different words; the third paper introduces morphology to this process and investigates whether prosodic changes activate memory traces associated with potential lexical derivations. Neural responses demonstrate that prosodic information indeed activates memory traces associated with words and their potential derivations without any given context. Strongly connected neural networks are argued to guarantee neural activation and implementation of long-term memory traces. Regardless of differences in prosodic typology, all languages exploit prosodic information for lexical processing, although to different extents. The amount of neural activation elicited by a particular piece of prosodic information is positively correlated with the strength of its lexical representation in the brain, which is called lexical specification. This dissertation could serve as a first step towards building an electrophysiological-perceptual taxonomy of prosodic processing based on lexical specification.

Ort, förlag, år, upplaga, sidor
Stockholm: Department of Linguistics, Stockholm University, 2016. s. 112
Nyckelord
lexical access, prosody, neuroimaging, electroencephalography, event-related potentials, memory trace, typology, English, Turkish, Swedish
Nationell ämneskategori
Jämförande språkvetenskap och allmän lingvistik
Forskningsämne
lingvistik
Identifikatorer
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-134571 (URN)978-91-7649-557-5 (ISBN)978-91-7649-558-2 (ISBN)
Disputation
2016-12-02, hörsal 9, hus D, Universitetsvägen 10 D, Stockholm, 14:00 (Engelska)
Opponent
Handledare
Tillgänglig från: 2016-11-09 Skapad: 2016-10-11 Senast uppdaterad: 2022-02-28Bibliografiskt granskad

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Zora, HaticeSchwarz, Iris-CorinnaHeldner, Mattias

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