Content area

Abstract

Despite the numerous examples of anticipatory cognitive processes at micro and macro levels in many animal species, the idea that anticipation of specific words plays an integral role in real-time language processing has been contentious. Here we exploited a phonological regularity of English indefinite articles ('an' precedes nouns beginning with vowel sounds, whereas 'a' precedes nouns beginning with consonant sounds) in combination with event-related brain potential recordings from the human scalp to show that readers' brains can pre-activate individual words in a graded fashion to a degree that can be estimated from the probability that each word is given as a continuation for a sentence fragment offline. These findings are evidence that readers use the words in a sentence (as cues to their world knowledge) to estimate relative likelihoods for upcoming words.

Details

Title
Probabilistic word pre-activation during language comprehension inferred from electrical brain activity
Author
DeLong, Katherine A; Urbach, Thomas P; Kutas, Marta
Pages
1117-21
Publication year
2005
Publication date
Aug 2005
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
10976256
e-ISSN
15461726
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
274608813
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Aug 2005