1,529 results on '"Sentence comprehension"'
Search Results
2. Category Locality Theory: A unified account of locality effects in sentence comprehension
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Isono, Shinnosuke
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- 2024
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3. A neurobiologically inspired model of sentence comprehension.
- Author
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Kröger, Bernd J. and Bekolay, Trevor
- Abstract
While AI models of sentence comprehension reach high, human-like performance levels, the architecture and neural functioning of these network models are not biologically plausible. We propose a neurobiologically inspired neural network model for sentence comprehension that includes modules representing a mental lexicon, syntactic processing, and semantic processing. Alongside the hierarchical module structure, the developmental trial-and-error (or iterative engineering) process for building the model resulted in the need for two parallel processing pathways, a content-related path that directly forwards lexical information to semantic sentence processing, and a sequence-related path, unfolding the syntactic structure of the sentence. A semantic processing module integrates the information from both pathways. At the model’s highest processing level, the information processed in both pathways allows for thematic role assignment, or semantic event specification, for the sentence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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4. On the Nature of Action–Sentence Compatibility Effects.
- Author
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Teskey, Morgan, Svendsen, Kristofer, Bub, Daniel N., and Masson, Michael E. J.
- Abstract
Strong versions of the embodied account of language processing propose that comprehension depends on the mental simulation of sensorimotor experiences conveyed by linguistic meaning. Primary support in favor of this view is based on demonstrations of processing advantages for compatibility between an action implied by sentence content and concurrent sensorimotor processing. Although these effects have been reported across a variety of contexts, various attempts to reproduce these results, both through direct replication and conceptual extension, have not been successful. We present a series of experiments that examine the viability of previous methods used to obtain compatibility effects and the validity of the typical interpretation of such effects as evidence for mental simulation of described actions. Our findings add to the growing body of evidence that compatibility between sentence content and sensorimotor processing does not produce robust compatibility effects. Further, our findings suggest the data obtained from some studies that have been successful in generating compatibility effects can be accounted for without appealing to the notion that these effects are due to the simulation of actions implied by the meaning of a sentence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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5. Neural basis of speech and grammar symptoms in non-fluent variant primary progressive aphasia spectrum
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Lorca-Puls, Diego L, Gajardo-Vidal, Andrea, Mandelli, Maria Luisa, Illán-Gala, Ignacio, Ezzes, Zoe, Wauters, Lisa D, Battistella, Giovanni, Bogley, Rian, Ratnasiri, Buddhika, Licata, Abigail E, Battista, Petronilla, García, Adolfo M, Tee, Boon Lead, Lukic, Sladjana, Boxer, Adam L, Rosen, Howard J, Seeley, William W, Grinberg, Lea T, Spina, Salvatore, Miller, Bruce L, Miller, Zachary A, Henry, Maya L, Dronkers, Nina F, and Gorno-Tempini, Maria Luisa
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Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Rare Diseases ,Aging ,Dementia ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Brain Disorders ,Neurodegenerative ,Neurosciences ,Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) ,Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (ADRD) ,Aphasia ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Neurological ,Humans ,Aphasia ,Broca ,Prospective Studies ,Dysarthria ,Speech ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Apraxias ,Aphasia ,Primary Progressive ,Primary Progressive Nonfluent Aphasia ,articulation ,syntactic ,sentence production ,sentence comprehension ,agrammatic ,lesion-symptom ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
The non-fluent/agrammatic variant of primary progressive aphasia (nfvPPA) is a neurodegenerative syndrome primarily defined by the presence of apraxia of speech (AoS) and/or expressive agrammatism. In addition, many patients exhibit dysarthria and/or receptive agrammatism. This leads to substantial phenotypic variation within the speech-language domain across individuals and time, in terms of both the specific combination of symptoms as well as their severity. How to resolve such phenotypic heterogeneity in nfvPPA is a matter of debate. 'Splitting' views propose separate clinical entities: 'primary progressive apraxia of speech' when AoS occurs in the absence of expressive agrammatism, 'progressive agrammatic aphasia' (PAA) in the opposite case, and 'AOS + PAA' when mixed motor speech and language symptoms are clearly present. While therapeutic interventions typically vary depending on the predominant symptom (e.g. AoS versus expressive agrammatism), the existence of behavioural, anatomical and pathological overlap across these phenotypes argues against drawing such clear-cut boundaries. In the current study, we contribute to this debate by mapping behaviour to brain in a large, prospective cohort of well characterized patients with nfvPPA (n = 104). We sought to advance scientific understanding of nfvPPA and the neural basis of speech-language by uncovering where in the brain the degree of MRI-based atrophy is associated with inter-patient variability in the presence and severity of AoS, dysarthria, expressive agrammatism or receptive agrammatism. Our cross-sectional examination of brain-behaviour relationships revealed three main observations. First, we found that the neural correlates of AoS and expressive agrammatism in nfvPPA lie side by side in the left posterior inferior frontal lobe, explaining their behavioural dissociation/association in previous reports. Second, we identified a 'left-right' and 'ventral-dorsal' neuroanatomical distinction between AoS versus dysarthria, highlighting (i) that dysarthria, but not AoS, is significantly influenced by tissue loss in right-hemisphere motor-speech regions; and (ii) that, within the left hemisphere, dysarthria and AoS map onto dorsally versus ventrally located motor-speech regions, respectively. Third, we confirmed that, within the large-scale grammar network, left frontal tissue loss is preferentially involved in expressive agrammatism and left temporal tissue loss in receptive agrammatism. Our findings thus contribute to define the function and location of the epicentres within the large-scale neural networks vulnerable to neurodegenerative changes in nfvPPA. We propose that nfvPPA be redefined as an umbrella term subsuming a spectrum of speech and/or language phenotypes that are closely linked by the underlying neuroanatomy and neuropathology.
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- 2024
6. The comprehension of double negation in Chinese children with reading difficulties.
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Hu, Shenai, Delfitto, Denis, Yang, Yuxin, and Vender, Maria
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READING disability diagnosis , *READING disability , *RESEARCH funding , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *LONGITUDINAL method , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *CHILDREN - Abstract
This study investigated the processing of double negation in Chinese children with reading difficulties. The comprehension of Mandarin affirmative, single negative and double negative sentences was tested with Chinese young poor readers and typical readers, using a sentence-picture verification task. Results showed that double negative sentences were most difficult to process for both groups; the poor readers performed significantly worse than the typical readers in comprehending double negative sentences, while no difference between the two groups was observed in comprehending affirmative and single negative sentences. Besides, morphological awareness correlated with the comprehension of double negative and single negative sentences in poor readers, while this correlation did not emerge with typical readers. Overall, our results suggest that children with reading difficulties experienced great processing difficulty in double negation, confirming that reading disorders are also characterised by oral language difficulties, in particular in the comprehension of sentences requiring high processing costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Native and Non-Native Speakers' Recognition of Chinese Two-Character Words in Audio Sentence Comprehension.
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Ma, Wenling, Li, Degao, and Dong, Xiuling
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CHINESE language , *COLLOCATION (Linguistics) , *HOMONYMS , *NOUNS , *DECISION making - Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to examine native and non-native speakers' recognition of Chinese two-character words (2C-words) in the context of audio sentence comprehension. The recording was played of a sentence, in which a collocation composed of a number word, a sortal classifier, and a noun (NCN) was embedded. When the participants were about to hear the noun of the NCN (Noun), the playing stopped, and a target was visually presented, which was the Noun, the character-transposed word of the Noun (NounT), or a control word (NounC), or was a homophone nonword for Noun, NounT, or NounC. The participants were required to make a lexical decision on the target before they resumed listening. The results showed that both native and non-native speakers were able to take visually presented 2C-word targets as semantic whole entities in the context of audio sentence comprehension, which was mediated by their Chinese proficiency. Native speakers readily processed visually presented 2C-words both as wholes and according to their constituent characters, but non-native speakers were not likely to process the 2C-words according to their constituent characters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Age Differences in Context Use During Reading and Downstream Effects on Recognition Memory.
- Author
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Haeuser, Katja I. and Kray, Jutta
- Abstract
It is well-known that sentential context modulates sentence processing. But does context also have effects that extend beyond the immediate moment, for example, by impacting the memory representations that people store? And are there age-related differences in this process? Here, we investigated this question. German readers who varied in age self-paced through constraining sentences that continued in a predictable or less predictable fashion. Participants' recognition memory was then tested for previously seen (i.e., "old") words and for initially predictable but not actually presented words (i.e., "lures"). The results showed that readers of all ages slowed down when reading unpredictable sentences. However, aging individuals maintained less sentence-specific information than younger adults: They not only understood sentential materials less correctly on the fly, but they also showed disproportionate rates of false remembering and less successful old–new discrimination in the recognition memory test. Of note, rates of false remembering were reduced in those aging readers who allocated more time toward reading unpredictable sentence continuations. Together, our results show that aging increases reliance on gist or schema-congruent processing but that more attentive encoding of text can buffer against some of the resulting memory distortions. Public Significance Statement: We show that aging increases the likelihood of falsely remembering episodes that were never witnessed but match ones knowledge about the world (i.e., schemas). Aging individuals are also less likely to correctly recognize information that does not align with their schemas. This shows that older individuals are more likely to rely on things they already know about the world, but they are less likely to spend time with new information. Finally, we found that aging individuals have a distorted perception of their own memories, as they frequently issue false-memory judgments with high confidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Deep learning models to study sentence comprehension in the human brain.
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Arana, Sophie, Pesnot Lerousseau, Jacques, and Hagoort, Peter
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BRAIN physiology , *READING , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *NEURAL pathways , *NATURAL language processing , *LEARNING , *LINGUISTICS , *DEEP learning , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks - Abstract
Recent artificial neural networks that process natural language achieve unprecedented performance in tasks requiring sentence-level understanding. As such, they could be interesting models of the integration of linguistic information in the human brain. We review works that compare these artificial language models with human brain activity and we assess the extent to which this approach has improved our understanding of the neural processes involved in natural language comprehension. Two main results emerge. First, the neural representation of word meaning aligns with the context-dependent, dense word vectors used by the artificial neural networks. Second, the processing hierarchy that emerges within artificial neural networks broadly matches the brain, but is surprisingly inconsistent across studies. We discuss current challenges in establishing artificial neural networks as process models of natural language comprehension. We suggest exploiting the highly structured representational geometry of artificial neural networks when mapping representations to brain data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Comprehension of active, passive, and causative sentences by Japanese-speaking children with intellectual disabilities and typical development.
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Takeo, Yuta and Otomo, Kiyoshi
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COMPARATIVE grammar , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *MEMORY , *PHONETICS , *DATA analysis software , *SPEECH perception , *VOCABULARY , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *CHILDREN - Abstract
This study aimed to identify the comprehension strategies employed for active, passive, and causative sentences and the involvement of phonological memory, which is a subsystem of working memory, in the comprehension skills of Japanese-speaking children with intellectual disability (ID) compared to those with typical development (TD). The participants were 29 children with ID and 18 children with TD who were matched according to mental and vocabulary ages and phonological memory scores. A picture selection method was employed as a sentence comprehension task. The stimulus sentences were grouped into four patterns of word order: subject (S) – object (O) – verb (V), OSV, SV, and OV. For example, in active sentences, the subject and object are assigned to agent and patient, respectively. The results indicated that children in both groups made comprehension errors for sentences that lacked information regarding the agent and sentences in which the two-noun sequence inverts the typical agent – patient or instructor – instructed order. Phonological memory's involvement in sentence comprehension varied according to the combination of participant groups, sentence types, and patterns. The results suggest that both children with ID and TD relied on agent bias, whereby children consider the first noun to denote the actor and a word order strategy of interpreting a sequence of two noun phrases followed by the transitive verb as agent – patient – act. Furthermore, phonological memory underpins understanding of the relationships among arguments, particularly in the case of sentences for which agent bias or word order strategy may result in misinterpretation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Age differences in the recruitment of syntactic analysis and semantic plausibility during sentence comprehension.
- Author
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Liu, Xinmiao
- Subjects
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AGE differences , *OLDER people , *SHORT-term memory , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *LEGAL judgments - Abstract
Syntactic analysis and semantic plausibility provide important cues to build the meaningful representation of sentences. The purpose of this research is to explore the age-related differences in the use of syntactic analysis and semantic plausibility during sentence comprehension under different working memory load conditions. A sentence judgment task was implemented among a group of older and younger adults. Semantic plausibility (plausible, implausible) and syntactic consistency (consistent, inconsistent) were manipulated in the experimental stimuli, and working memory load (high, low) was varied by manipulating the presentation of the stimuli. The study revealed a stronger effect of semantic plausibility in older adults than in younger adults when working memory load was low. But no significant age difference in the effect of syntactic consistency was discovered. When working memory load was high, there was a stronger effect of semantic plausibility and a weaker effect of syntactic consistency in older adults than in younger adults, which suggests that older adults relied more on semantic plausibility and less on syntactic analysis than younger adults. The findings indicate that there is an age-related increase in the use of semantic plausibility, and a reduction in the use of syntactic analysis as working memory load increases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The effect of context on noisy-channel sentence comprehension.
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Chen, Sihan, Nathaniel, Sarah, Ryskin, Rachel, and Gibson, Edward
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Context ,Error correction ,Noisy-channel ,Rational inference ,Sentence comprehension ,Male ,Female ,Humans ,Comprehension ,Semantics ,Language - Abstract
The process of sentence comprehension must allow for the possibility of noise in the input, e.g., from speaker error, listener mishearing, or environmental noise. Consequently, semantically implausible sentences such as The girl tossed the apple the boy are often interpreted as a semantically plausible alternative (e.g., The girl tossed the apple to the boy). Previous investigations of noisy-channel comprehension have relied exclusively on paradigms with isolated sentences. Because supportive contexts alter the expectations of possible interpretations, the noisy channel framework predicts that context should encourage more inference in interpreting implausible sentences, relative to null contexts (i.e. a lack of context) or unsupportive contexts. In the present work, we tested this prediction in four types of sentence constructions: two where inference is relatively frequent (double object - prepositional object), and two where inference is rare (active-passive). We found evidence that in the two sentence types that commonly elicit inference, supportive contexts encourage noisy-channel inferences about the intended meaning of implausible sentences more than non-supportive contexts or null contexts. These results suggest that noisy-channel inference may be more pervasive in everyday language processing than previously assumed based on work with isolated sentences.
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- 2023
13. Features matter: the role of number and gender features during the online processing of subject- and object- relative clauses in Italian
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Biondo, N, Pagliarini, E, Moscati, V, Rizzi, L, and Belletti, A
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Sentence comprehension ,relative clauses ,number features ,gender features ,self-paced reading ,relativized minimality ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Linguistics ,Experimental Psychology - Abstract
In this study, we investigated whether different morphosyntactic features, i.e. number and gender, play a role during the adult online comprehension of subject relative clauses (SRC) and object relative clauses (ORC), in Italian. This study was inspired by developmental studies showing that children struggle with ORC compared to SRC; yet, ORC comprehension improves if the head and the subject of the RC mismatch in relevant morphosyntactic features (e.g. number but not gender in Italian, based on the featural Relativized Minimality principle, fRM). We found that Italian adults read ORC more slowly than SRC verbs; moreover, ORC verbs were read faster in the head-subject number mismatch condition, while there was no facilitation in the head-subject gender mismatch condition, in line with developmental studies and fRM. We conclude that online parsing is feature-sensitive, that features are not all equally “relevant”, and that current models should be refined to account for these differences.
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- 2023
14. Sentence comprehension in Malay-speaking adults with aphasia: the role of affix integration.
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Aziz, Mohd Azmarul A, Smith, Giuditta, Alisaputri, Marina L., Abdul Hamid, Badrulzaman, and Garraffa, Maria
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WORD order (Grammar) , *LINGUISTICS , *THEMATIC maps , *SYNTAX (Grammar) , *MORPHOSYNTAX , *APHASIA - Abstract
BackgroundAimsMethods & proceduresOutcomes and resultsConclusionsOne of the impairments in comprehension mostly reported for aphasia is that in reversible passive sentences, where a systematic asymmetry with reversible active sentences has been attested across languages. In several accounts, this selective impairment has been proposed to be the result of the specific syntax of passive sentences. However, some results particularly from flexible word order languages suggest that a pattern where both active and passive sentences are impaired also exists.In this study, we examined the actives and passives in the comprehension of a flexible word order language, namely standard Malay, in people with aphasia (PWA), aiming to confirm that the predominant pattern in this language is one of generalised impairment across reversible sentences (active and passive), and not an asymmetrical one. The role of fluency in determining the pattern of impairment was also explored.Fourteen healthy adults and 20 PWA, 14 with fluent aphasia and 6 with non-fluent aphasia, took part in a comprehension study in standard Malay. Standard Malay is a flexible word order language that relies on the parsing of the voice affix on the verb to correctly interpret both active and passive sentences. Participants were tested on a sentence-picture matching task on comprehension of active and passive reversible clauses.The study revealed that PWA were overall less accurate than healthy speakers in comprehension of reversible active and passive sentences, and non-fluent PWA were less accurate than fluent PWA with no effect of sentence type (active/passive). While not predominant, an asymmetric pattern was present in some participants. We propose that an impairment in thematic role assignment leads to a generalised impairment in comprehension of reversible sentences, while preserved thematic role mapping and impaired syntax lead to an asymmetric impairment.The study confirmed that speakers of Malay mostly show a generalised impairment in both active and passive sentences. Given the nature of the language, we propose that this suggests that impairment in Malay is predominantly shown on affix integration, first in mapping of thematic roles, and then in the full syntactic processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Theta-Band Neural Oscillations Reflect Cognitive Control During Language Processing.
- Author
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Ness, Tal, Langlois, Valerie J., Novick, Jared M., and Kim, Albert E.
- Abstract
As we interpret language moment by moment, we often encounter conflicting cues in the input that create incompatible representations of sentence meaning, which must be promptly resolved. Although ample evidence suggests that cognitive control aids in the resolution of such conflict, the methods commonly used to assess cognitive control's involvement in language comprehension provide limited information about the time course of its engagement. Here, we show that neural oscillatory activity in the theta-band (∼3–8 Hz), which is associated with cognitive control in nonlinguistic tasks like Stroop and Flanker, provides a real-time index of cognitive control during language processing. We conducted time-frequency analyses of four electroencephalogram data sets, and consistently observed that increased theta-band power was elicited by various kinds of linguistic conflict. Moreover, increases in the degree of conflict within a sentence produced greater increases in theta activity. These effects emerged as early as 300 ms from the onset of the initiating event, indicating rapid cognitive-control recruitment during sentence processing in response to conflicting representations. Crucially, the effect patterns could not be ascribed to processing difficulty that is not due to conflict (e.g., semantic implausibility was neither necessary nor sufficient to elicit theta activity). We suggest that neural oscillations in the theta-band offer a reliable way to test specific hypotheses about cognitive-control engagement during real-time language comprehension. Public Significance Statement: The results reported in this work provide the clearest evidence available that theta-band oscillations index cognitive control demands during language comprehension, thus extending previous findings that theta-band activity is elicited by representational conflict in cognitive tasks like Flanker and Stroop. Our findings support the growing body of work indicating that cognitive control plays a core role in ordinary language comprehension and provide a novel application of an established electrophysiological measure to study the real-time dynamics of cognitive control operations during sentence processing. The theta effects observed in this work, which appeared rapidly upon encountering the linguistic conflict, corroborate psycholinguistic models predicting that conflict during comprehension must be resolved quickly for successful communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Incremental Discourse‐Update Constrains Number Agreement Attraction Effect.
- Author
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Kim, Sanghee J. and Xiang, Ming
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RECOLLECTION (Psychology) , *RELATIVE clauses , *AMERICAN English language , *DISCOURSE - Abstract
While a large body of work in sentence comprehension has explored how different types of linguistic information are used to guide syntactic parsing, less is known about the effect of discourse structure. This study investigates this question, focusing on the main and subordinate discourse contrast manifested in the distinction between restrictive relative clauses (RRCs) and appositive relative clauses (ARCs) in American English. In three self‐paced reading experiments, we examined whether both RRCs and ARCs interfere with the matrix clause content and give rise to the agreement attraction effect. While the standard attraction effect was consistently observed in the baseline RRC structures, the effect varied in the ARC structures. These results collectively suggest that discourse structure indeed constrains syntactic dependency resolution. Most importantly, we argue that what is at stake is not the static discourse structure properties at the global sentence level. Instead, attention should be given to the incremental update of the discourse structure in terms of which discourse questions are active at any given moment of a discourse. The current findings have implications for understanding the way discourse structure, specifically the active state of discourse questions, constrains memory retrieval. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. What Is Important to Measure in Sentence-Level Language Comprehension?
- Author
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Sarmiento, Cherish M. and Truckenmiller, Adrea J.
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LANGUAGE acquisition ,STRUGGLING readers ,RESEARCH personnel ,EDUCATORS ,VOCABULARY ,COMPUTER adaptive testing ,COMPUTERS in education - Abstract
Educators and researchers have been interested in supporting sentence-level language comprehension for struggling readers, but it has been challenging to research. To investigate the properties of sentences that might be useful targets for future research in instruction and assessment, we coded several features of the items in a computer-adaptive scale of sentence comprehension. The Syntactic Knowledge Task is designed for students in Grades 3–10. We then explored how the features of the sentences were related to the item's difficulty value to determine which aspects of sentence-level language made sentences more and less challenging for students across a range of development. We found that genre, words that represent a logical connection, number of idea units, long words, and words on the Academic Word List were significantly associated with item difficulty. Implications for understanding students' sentence-level language development are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Pupillometry reveals resting state alpha power correlates with individual differences in adult auditory language comprehension.
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Lum, Jarrad A.G., Barham, Michael P., and Hill, Aron T.
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PUPILLOMETRY ,BRAIN waves ,INDIVIDUAL differences ,COMPREHENSION ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Published
- 2024
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19. Comprehension of English for‐adverbials: The Nature of Lexical Meanings and the Neurocognitive Architecture of Language.
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Piñango, Maria M., Lai, Yao‐Ying, Deo, Ashwini, Foster‐Hanson, Emily, Lacadie, Cheryl, and Constable, Todd
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FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *ENGLISH language , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling - Abstract
What is the nature of lexical meanings such that they can both compose with others and also appear boundless? We investigate this question by examining the compositional properties of
for ‐time adverbial as in “Ana jumped for an hour .” At issue is the source of the associated iterative reading which lacks overt morphophonological support, yet, the iteration is not disconnected from the lexical meanings in the sentence. This suggests an analysis whereby the iterative reading is the result of the interaction between lexical meanings under a specific compositional configuration. We test the predictions of two competing accounts: Mismatch‐and‐Repair and Partition‐Measure. They differ in their assumptions about lexical meanings: assumptions that have implications for the possible compositional mechanisms that each can invoke. Mismatch‐and‐Repair assumes that lexical meaning representations are discrete, separate from the conceptual system from which they originally emerged and brought into sentence meaning through syntactic composition. Partition‐Measure assumes that lexical meanings are contextually salient conceptual structures substantially indistinguishable from the conceptual system that they inhabit. During comprehension, lexical meanings construe a conceptual representation, in parallel, morphosyntactic and morphophonological composition as determined by the lexical items involved in the sentence. Whereas both hypotheses capture the observed cost in the punctual predicate plusfor ‐time adverbial composition (e.g.,jump (vs.swim )for an hour ), their predictions differ regarding iteration withdurative predicates; for example,swim for a year (vs.for an hour ). Mismatch‐and‐Repair predicts contrasting processing profiles and nonoverlapping activation patterns along punctuality differences. Partition‐Measure predicts overlapping processing and cortical distribution profiles, along the presence of iterativity. Results from a self‐paced reading and an functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) studies bear out the predictions of the Partition‐Measure account, supporting a view of linguistic meaning composition in line with an architecture of language whereby combinatoriality and generativity are distributed, carried out in parallel across linguistic and nonlinguistic subsystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Phonological neighbors cooperate during spoken-sentence processing: Evidence from a nonword detection task.
- Author
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Dufour, Sophie, Fournet, Colas, Mirault, Jonathan, and Grainger, Jonathan
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WORD recognition , *SPEECH , *AXIOMS , *NEIGHBORS , *VOCABULARY - Abstract
We used a novel nonword detection task to examine the lexical competition principle postulated in most models of spoken word recognition. To do so, in Experiment 1 we presented sequences of spoken words with half of the sequences containing a nonword, and the target nonword (i.e., press a response key whenever you detect a nonword in the sequence) could either be phonologically related (a phonological neighbor) or unrelated to the immediately preceding word. We reasoned that the reactivation of a phonological neighbor during target nonword processing should delay the moment at which a nonword decision can be made. Contrary to our hypothesis, participants were faster at detecting nonwords when they were preceded by a phonological neighbor compared with an unrelated word. In Experiment 2, an inhibitory effect of phonological relatedness on nonword decisions was observed in a classic priming situation using the same set of related and unrelated word-nonword pairs. We discuss the implications of these findings in regard to the main models of spoken word recognition, and conclude that our specific experimental set-up with phonological neighbors embedded in spoken sentences is more sensitive to cooperative interactions between co-activated sublexical representations than lexical competition between co-activated lexical representations, with the latter being modulated by whether or not the words compete for the same slot in time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. Compositionality, communication, and commitments.
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Drobňák, Matej
- Abstract
In recent years, there has been increasing interest in Rich Meaning Approaches (RMA) that understand the meanings of words as rich conceptual structures, such as Pustejovsky’s generative lexicon. The reason for this is based on compositionality, as rich meanings have been shown to be indispensable for explaining conflict resolution in compositional processes. However, while the benefits of postulating rich meanings to explain conflict resolution are undeniable, the overall contribution of rich meanings to sentence comprehension has not yet been discussed. This paper aims to show that inferentialism counts as a version of RMA and that, once this is recognised, it can provide a robust rationale for the role of rich meanings in sentence comprehension. The rationale is based on the idea that rich meanings are indispensable for pragmatic purposes as they play a role in facilitating communication. As I argue, rich meanings not only assist in composing the semantic (truth-conditional) content of complete sentences, but also provide crucial information for determining the discursive commitments and entitlements established by utterances. Consequently, examining the implications of inferentialism for compositional processes a) offers new insights into their function and outputs and b) presents an alternative to the representationalist perspective on sentence comprehension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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22. Mental Simulation of Implied Orientation Information in Chinese Sentences
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Wang, Huili, Li, Wei, Gu, Beixian, Fu, Yang, Chang, Xin, Liu, Wei, Goos, Gerhard, Series Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, van Leeuwen, Jan, Series Editor, Hutchison, David, Editorial Board Member, Kanade, Takeo, Editorial Board Member, Kittler, Josef, Editorial Board Member, Kleinberg, Jon M., Editorial Board Member, Kobsa, Alfred, Series Editor, Mattern, Friedemann, Editorial Board Member, Mitchell, John C., Editorial Board Member, Naor, Moni, Editorial Board Member, Nierstrasz, Oscar, Series Editor, Pandu Rangan, C., Editorial Board Member, Sudan, Madhu, Series Editor, Terzopoulos, Demetri, Editorial Board Member, Tygar, Doug, Editorial Board Member, Weikum, Gerhard, Series Editor, Vardi, Moshe Y, Series Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Kubincová, Zuzana, editor, Hao, Tianyong, editor, Capuano, Nicola, editor, Temperini, Marco, editor, Ge, Shili, editor, Mu, Yuanyuan, editor, Fantozzi, Paolo, editor, and Yang, Jing, editor
- Published
- 2024
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23. Processing cataphoric they amidst pronominal innovation
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Foley, Steven and Ahn, Byron
- Published
- 2024
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24. Visuospatial perspective-taking of a protagonist during narrative comprehension: the effects of task load and individual differences in visuospatial working memory.
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Asako Hosokawa and Shinji Kitagami
- Subjects
INDIVIDUAL differences ,NARRATIVES ,COGNITIVE psychology ,SHORT-term memory - Abstract
Introduction: This study examined whether visuospatial perspective uses the character perspective during narrative comprehension. Method: Participants read narrative stimuli depicting the spatial positional relationships between characters and objects and judged whether the objects were on the left or right from the character's perspective. We manipulated whether the spatial positional relationships between characters depicted in the narrative stimuli resulted in a visuospatial perspective. We hypothesized that the high-load perspective-taking condition would indicate longer reaction times compared to the low-load perspective-taking condition, as shifting perspectives between characters in the high-load condition require more time for visuospatial perspective-taking. Results: As predicted, the reaction time was longer for high-load perspective- taking than for low-load perspective-taking. Discussion: During narrative comprehension, the reaction time for visuospatial perspective-taking must move virtually within the representation from the main character's perspective to that of another character. Visuospatial perspective- taking is involved in narrative comprehension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Examining gullibility with sentence verification judgments.
- Author
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Ozuru, Yasuhiro and Heidari, Masoumeh
- Abstract
AbstractThree experiments were conducted to examine gullibility as measured by people’s bias to respond with a True response when performing sentence verification judgment task. The experiments manipulated the location of unfamiliar concepts such that some sentences contained unfamiliar concepts in the subject while other sentences contained unfamiliar concepts in the predicate, hence measuring the bias to judge an idea to be true when one cannot make the decision relying on background knowledge. The results indicated: 1) a higher frequency of True response when an unfamiliar concept is located in the subject compared to when it is in the predicate; and 2) the frequency of True response was lower than chance level even when unfamiliar information is located in the subject. The results were discussed in relation to gullibility and how the verification judgment is processed as a plausibility judgment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. The Role of Working Memory and Short-Term Memory in Sentence Comprehension: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis in Probable Alzheimer's Disease.
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Gilardone, Giulia, Longo, Chiara, and Papagno, Costanza
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease , *SHORT-term memory , *MEMORY span , *SPECIFIC language impairment in children , *READING comprehension , *STANDARDIZED tests , *APOLIPOPROTEIN E4 , *ENGLISH language - Abstract
The role of either short-term memory (STM) or working memory (WM) in sentence comprehension is a matter of debate. Although it is commonly accepted that memory resources are necessary for sentence comprehension, there is no agreement regarding the nature of their role. The aim of this review is to investigate and synthesize assessment tools and correlation data between STM or WM and sentence comprehension in probable Alzheimer's disease (AD). To this aim, a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines. PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, PsycInfo, and LLBA databases were searched. Two independent authors selected peer-reviewed articles published in English and focused on the relationship between STM or WM and sentence comprehension in probable AD. A total of 11 case–control studies were included at the end of the selection process. Most studies adopted offline tasks to evaluate sentence comprehension, while a small number of authors applied online experimental tasks. The digit span forward and backward were the most employed standardized tests to evaluate phonological STM and WM, respectively. The meta-analysis results supported the association between performance on STM and WM and comprehension tasks. However, moderate heterogeneity was found, mainly due to the small number of included studies, especially for STM, and the substantial variability of the adopted tasks. Therefore, in order to clarify the specific source of language comprehension deficits, new and sophisticated experiments should be conducted using adequate material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Eye-movement reveals word order effects on comparative sentences in older adults using a verb-final language.
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Jihyun Hwang, Lee, Seunghun J., and Jee Eun Sung
- Subjects
OLDER people ,WORD order (Grammar) ,AGE groups ,YOUNG adults ,NATIVE language ,KOREAN language ,EYE tracking ,REACTION time - Abstract
Objectives: This study aimed to examine age-related differences in the comprehension of Korean comparative sentences with varying word orders by employing both offline and online measures, and to investigate how variations in word order affect sentence processing across different age groups. Methods: A total of 52 monolingual native Korean speakers, 26 young adults, and 26 older adults, completed a sentence-picture-matching task under two word order conditions: comparative-first and nominative-first. Offline measures included accuracy and response time, while an online method involved eye)tracking within the Visual World Paradigm. Data analyses were performed using linear and generalized linear mixed-effects models. Results: Older adults demonstrated lower accuracy and longer response times compared to younger individuals. Distinctive fixation patterns were observed, particularly in the sentential-final phrase, across different age groups. Specifically, nominative-first sentences elicited greater target advantage scores among younger adults, whereas older adults showed higher scores in comparative-first sentences. Conclusion: The study highlights the potential of comparative sentences in elucidating age-related changes in sentence comprehension. These differences were evident not only in offline tasks but also in real-time processing, as evidenced by eye-tracking data. The findings suggest distinct processing strategies employed by young and older adults and underscore the importance of considering both syntactic and semantic cues in sentence comprehension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Yesterday Is History, Tomorrow Is a Mystery: An Eye-Tracking Investigation of the Processing of Past and Future Time Reference During Sentence Reading
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Biondo, Nicoletta, Soilemezidi, Marielena, and Mancini, Simona
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Eye Movements ,Eye-Tracking Technology ,Humans ,Language ,Reading ,Time Perception ,time reference ,tense ,adverbs ,sentence comprehension ,eye movements ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
The ability to think about nonpresent time is a crucial aspect of human cognition. Both the past and future imply a temporal displacement of an event outside the "now." They also intrinsically differ: The past refers to inalterable events; the future to alterable events, to possible worlds. Are the past and future processed similarly or differently? In this study, we addressed this question by investigating how Spanish speakers process past/future time reference violations during sentence processing, while recording eye movements. We also investigated the role of verbs (in isolation; within sentences) and adverbs (deictic; nondeictic) during time processing. Existing accounts propose that past processing, which requires a link to discourse, is more complex than future processing, which-like the present-is locally bound. Our findings show that past and future processing differs, especially at early stages of verb processing, but this difference is not limited to the presence/absence of discourse linking. We found earlier mismatch effects for past compared to future time reference in incongruous sentences, in line with previous studies. Interestingly, it took longer to categorize the past than the future tense when verbs were presented in isolation. However, it took longer to categorize the future than the past when verbs were presented in congruous sentences, arguably because the future implies alterable worlds. Finally, temporal adverbs were found to play an important role in reinspection and reanalysis triggered by the presence of undefined time frames (nondeictic adverbs) or incongruences (mismatching verbs). (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
29. Putamen and L1-L2 sentence comprehension: Evidence from functional magnetic resonance mapping
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Simin Meykadeh, Werner Sommer, and SeyedAmirHossein Batouli
- Subjects
bilingualism ,sentence comprehension ,putamen ,l1 ,fmri ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
Abstract The putamen is a subcortical structure. However, neuroimaging studies have demonstrated the involvement of the left putamen in other language functions such as bilingual language processing. Some studies have also shown the role of the right putamen in higher-order language functions. The present reanalysis aims to investigate the role of the bilateral putamen during the L1-L2 sentence comprehension in bilinguals using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Hence, 36 Turkish-Persian bilinguals (21 females and 15 males), who had acquired their second language at the age of seven after entering school, were selected in a purposive sampling method to perform an auditory grammaticality judgment task within an alternative language switching paradigm. After detecting the activity of the bilateral putamen at the whole-brain level, in FSL, percent signal change was extracted per participant as an intensity measure and analyzed statistically in SPSS. At the whole-brain level, the findings demonstrated that the bilateral putamen was involved in the comprehension of syntactic structures during the alternating presentation of L1 and L2 stimuli. In addition, regardless of the hemisphere involved, the significant grammaticality effect for L1 as well as the increased sensitivity for L1-violation stimuli compared to L2-violation stimuli may imply the standard language dominance effect also in the putamen. Keywords: Bilingualism, Sentence comprehension, Putamen, L1, fMRI Introduction Subcortical structures are considered a key component in language processing in bilinguals. Basal ganglia are a group of subcortical structures found deep within the White Matter of the brain and have extensive connections with the cerebral cortex, especially Broca's area and speech motor cortex. These nuclei include Putamen, Caudate, Pallidum, substantia nigra and subthalamic. Nowadays, the involvement of Putamen in production processes is evidenced, nevertheless, very little is known about the contribution of this region in understanding syntax in bilinguals. To our knowledge, no studies have examined the role of Putamen in syntactic processing in bilinguals. Here, we aimed to explore it within an alternative language switching paradigm. To address this gap, the current reanalysis focuses on the following research question. How is the performance of bilateral Putamen during L1-L2 syntactic processing? To answer this research question guiding this study, a bilingual task with alternating language switching paradigm were developed. In this task, brain imaging was performed using event-related fMRI while the participants listened to a total of 128 sentences in two Turkish and Persian languages. Materials and methods To allow for reliable ROI-based analysis, 36 right-handed and balanced Turkish-Persian bilingual students were recruited to participate in this study. All participants were native speakers of Turkish and learned Persian at school from the age of seven. Participants' language proficiency levels were assessed by the Bilingual Dominance Scale (BDS) and no significant difference was observed between Turkish and Persian (i.e., between L1 and L2) in language dominance. During a bilingual grammaticality judgement task, participants heard 128 test sentences (64 in L1 and 64 in L2, with 50% violation per language) and made their judgment by pressing a button. Stimuli were presented using the Psychtoolbox in MATLAB via headphones. Stimuli were randomized for each condition, but alternated in a fixed sequence for language. MRI data were collected in NBML, Tehran, Iran, using a Siemens Prisma 3T scanner with a 20-channel head coil. For each participant, a high-resolution T1-weighted anatomical scan was acquired (TR = 1800msec, TE = 3053 msec, flip angle: 7°, 192 axial slices, slice thickness = 1 mm, field of view (FOV) = 256 mm2, 256 × 256 acquisition matrix, voxel size: 1×1×1 mm). After the anatomical scan, participants underwent a 21.5-min fMRI scan that used a whole brain echo planar imaging (EPI) sequence (TE: 30 ms, TR: 3000 ms, flip angle: 90°, slice thickness: 3 mm, voxel size: 3×3×3 mm, matrix size: 64×64, FOV: 192 mm2, 430 volumes and 45 axial slices per volume). Processing of the fMRI data was carried out using FEAT in FSL. Preprocessing steps included motion correction, slice-timing correction, non-brain removal using BET, spatial smoothing (6 mm FWHM), normalization, temporal filtering (with sigma = 50.0 s), and exploratory ICA-based data analysis. Statistical analyses of fMRI data were conducted using general linear modeling (GLM), as implemented in FSL. Z statistic images were thresholded using clusters determined by Z > 2.6 and a (corrected) cluster significance threshold of P < 0.05. After detecting the Cerebellum activation in the whole-brain analysis, percent signal changes were extracted as an intensity measure in this brain region. All statistical analyses were conducted in IBM SPSS Statistics 26. Discussion of results and conclusions The present reanalysis investigate the contribution of Putamen in Turkish-Persian participants during processing syntax. Our research question concerns whether there are differences in syntactic processing between L1 and L2 in bilateral Putamen in non-native participants. At the whole-brain level, the findings indicated that the bilateral Putamen is involved in modulating the syntactic aspects of language, supporting the previous pathological studies on Putamen as well as its association with cortical areas in the realm of bilingualism. Another crucial point is regarding the significant effect of grammaticality in L1 and significant differences between L1-ungrammatical and L2-ungrammatical sentences, irrespective of the involved hemisphere. This is in line with the behavioral performance of present sample in which bilinguals had longer reaction time and more errors for L1 which was leading to more brain activations. This could be arguably because of the standard language dominance effect placed on L1, as mentioned by Declerck & Koch (2023), demonstrating that the present population may have relied more on their L1 than L2. Accordingly, using Chinese-English bilingual speakers, Wang and his colleagues (2009) found that sustained and transient language control induced differential activation patterns, and that sustained and transient activities in the human brain modulate the behavioral costs during switching-related language control. Thus, it is reasonable to say that in mixed-language blocks, balanced bilinguals performed better in L1 than in L2. In sum, based on current sample and task, we propose that bilinguals who had learnt L2 at the age of seven when entering school have employed the bilateral Putamen during processing syntax with standard language dominance effect (i.e., better performance in L1 than in L2).
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- 2024
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30. پوتامن و درک جملات زبان اول و دوم: شواهدی از تصویربرداری تشدید مغناطیسی عملکردی.
- Author
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سیمین میکده, ورنر زومر, and سیدامیرحسین بتو&
- Abstract
The putamen is a subcortical structure. However, neuroimaging studies have demonstrated the involvement of the left putamen in other language functions such as bilingual language processing. Some studies have also shown the role of the right putamen in higher-order language functions. The present reanalysis aims to investigate the role of the bilateral putamen during the L1-L2 sentence comprehension in bilinguals using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Hence, 36 Turkish-Persian bilinguals (21 females and 15 males), who had acquired their second language at the age of seven after entering school, were selected in a purposive sampling method to perform an auditory grammaticality judgment task within an alternative language switching paradigm. After detecting the activity of the bilateral putamen at the whole-brain level, in FSL, percent signal change was extracted per participant as an intensity measure and analyzed statistically in SPSS. At the whole-brain level, the findings demonstrated that the bilateral putamen was involved in the comprehension of syntactic structures during the alternating presentation of L1 and L2 stimuli. In addition, regardless of the hemisphere involved, the significant grammaticality effect for L1 as well as the increased sensitivity for L1-violation stimuli compared to L2-violation stimuli may imply the standard language dominance effect also in the putamen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Event-related potentials and brain oscillations reflect unbalanced allocation of retrieval and integration efforts in sentence comprehension.
- Author
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Xu, Kunyu, Ma, Chenlu, Liu, Yiming, and Duann, Jeng-Ren
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN physiology , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *MEMORY , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *LANGUAGE & languages , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH funding , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Empirical studies have found a processing asymmetry between Chinese subject-extracted relative clauses (SRCs) and object-extracted relative clauses (ORCs). Still, there is no consensus on how this SRC-ORC asymmetry occurs. Thus, aiming to elucidate how the neural activity, in the forms of both event-related potentials (ERPs) and brain oscillations (i.e. event-related synchronisation/desynchronisation, ERS/ERD), attuned to sentences with different levels of processing difficulty, we conducted an electroencephalography (EEG) study to examine the comprehension of Chinese SRCs and ORCs. The results showed an N400 and a P600 effect when comparing SRCs and ORCs. Simultaneously, delta ERS was associated with N400 during the processing of both types of relative clauses and theta ERS with P600 during the processing of SRCs. By incorporating the ERP and ERS indexes, we propose that the dissociation between the integration and retrieval effort involved in sentence comprehension may account for the processing asymmetry between sentences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Six-year-olds' comprehension of object-gapped relative clause sentences: Investigating the contribution of NP number mismatch.
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Morton, Ian and Melanie Schuele, C.
- Subjects
CLAUSES (Grammar) ,SENTENCES (Grammar) ,VERB phrases ,SYNTAX (Grammar) ,RELATIVE clauses - Abstract
Comprehension of sentences with a center-embedded, object-gapped relative clause (ORC) is challenging for children as well as adults. Mismatching lexical and grammatical features of subject noun phrases (NPs) across the main clause and relative clause has been shown to facilitate comprehension. Adani et al. concluded that children's comprehension improved under conditions of NP number mismatch (e.g., singular main clause subject and plural relative clause subject) as compared with NP number match (e.g., both singular subjects). However, their stimuli provided number information on verb phrases (VPs) as well as NPs creating a confound for conclusions about facilitative effects of NP number mismatch. In this study, we isolated the contribution of NP number mismatch. Notably, 32 6-year-olds with typical language participated in a center-embedded, ORC sentence comprehension task with 4 types of stimuli: (a) NP number mismatch without VP number information (NP mismatch only), (b) NP number match without VP number information (NP match only), (c) NP number mismatch with VP number mismatch (NP + VP mismatch), and (d) NP number match with VP number match (NP + VP match). Children selected one of four pictures in an array to a verbally presented relative clause sentence; 56 sentences were presented. The within-subjects comparison for NP mismatch only and NP match only was not significant. However, the within-subjects comparison for NP mismatch only and NP + VP mismatch was significant. Children were more successful in NP + VP mismatch sentence comprehension ( r C = 0.70). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Influence of cognitive reserve on neuropsychological performance in subjective cognitive decline and mild cognitive impairment older adults.
- Author
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López-Higes, Ramón, Rubio-Valdehita, Susana, Delgado-Losada, María Luisa, and López-Sanz, David
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EPISODIC memory ,MILD cognitive impairment ,COGNITION disorders ,OLDER people ,COGNITIVE ability ,SHORT-term memory ,OLDER patients - Abstract
The analysis of the relationships between cognitive reserve and different cognitive domains has become a matter of interest since it can help us detect deviations from the typical ageing process. The main objective of our study was to analyse a structural equation model representing cognitive reserve's relationships with three cognitive domains (episodic memory, working memory, and sentence comprehension) in older adults with subjective cognitive decline and mild cognitive impairment patients, in a cross-sectional study. A total of 266 Spanish-speaking older adults, from 65 to 80 years old, voluntarily participated in the study. The assessment protocol includes questionnaires as well as screening and domain-specific tests, providing relevant information for the classification of participants in the two groups previously mentioned (n
1 = 150 and n2 = 116). The proposed model presented metric and configural invariance as well as stability across groups, since the indices reflecting goodness-of-fit reach acceptable values. Our hypotheses are partially confirmed since cognitive reserve strongly influences working memory and it does moderately in sentence comprehension in both groups, but it hardly influences episodic memory in the subjective cognitive decline group, while both are inversely associated in the patients' group. Working memory could be considered as a mechanism through which cognitive reserve exerts its protector role on other cognitive domains: on sentence comprehension in both groups, and on episodic memory in the subjective cognitive decline group. However, in mild cognitive impairments patients, cognitive reserve does no longer influence episodic memory via working memory in a significant manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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34. Incremental sentence processing is guided by a preference for agents: EEG evidence from Basque.
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Isasi-Isasmendi, Arrate, Sauppe, Sebastian, Andrews, Caroline, Laka, Itziar, Meyer, Martin, and Bickel, Balthasar
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN physiology , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *SEMANTICS , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *NEURONS , *COMPARATIVE grammar , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Comprehenders across languages tend to interpret role-ambiguous arguments as the subject or the agent of a sentence during parsing. However, the evidence for such a subject/agent preference rests on the comprehension of transitive, active-voice sentences where agents/subjects canonically precede patients/objects. The evidence is thus potentially confounded by the canonical order of arguments. Transitive sentence stimuli additionally conflate the semantic agent role and the syntactic subject function. We resolve these two confounds in an experiment on the comprehension of intransitive sentences in Basque. When exposed to sentence-initial role-ambiguous arguments, comprehenders preferentially interpreted these as agents and had to revise their interpretation when the verb disambiguated to patient-initial readings. The revision was reflected in an N400 component in ERPs and a decrease in power in the alpha and lower beta bands. This finding suggests that sentence processing is guided by a top-down heuristic to interpret ambiguous arguments as agents, independently of word order and independently of transitivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. The role of cognitive control in bilingual language comprehension: An event-related potential study of dense code-switching sentences.
- Author
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Jiang, Siyi, Ma, Lvheng, and Chen, Baoguo
- Subjects
- *
EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *COGNITIVE ability , *BILINGUALISM , *CODE switching (Linguistics) , *DOMINANT language - Abstract
This study investigated the engagement of domain-general cognitive control during the comprehension of dense code-switching sentences. Stimulus-locked event-related potentials (ERPs) were measured while L1-dominant Chinese–English bilinguals read switch and non-switch sentences. The results of the reading task revealed language dominance effects on the N400, left anterior negativity (LAN) and late positive component (LPC). The language dominance effects at lexical level (i.e., on the N400 and LAN) were modulated by individual differences in monitoring capacity. In contrast, inhibition capacity predicted code-switching costs at the sentence level (i.e., for the LPC component). The results suggest that proactive monitoring and reactive inhibition affect different processing stages during the comprehension of dense code-switching sentences. These findings partially align with processing models of code-switching incorporating a dual control mode perspective and contribute new insight into the dynamic interplay between reactive and proactive control processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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36. Structural priming from production to comprehension in aphasia.
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Keen, Austin D. and Lee, Jiyeon
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICS , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *CLINICAL trials , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *SPEECH evaluation , *CASE-control method , *TASK performance , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *SEVERITY of illness index , *REHABILITATION of aphasic persons , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *METROPOLITAN areas , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DATA analysis software , *STATISTICAL models , *DATA analysis - Abstract
Many people with aphasia (PWA) show deficits in sentence production and comprehension, in part, due to an inefficient mapping between messages and syntactic structures. Structural priming—the tendency to repeat previously encountered sentence structures—has been shown to support implicit syntactic learning within and across production and comprehension modalities in healthy adults. Structural priming is also effective in facilitating sentence production and comprehension in PWA. However, less is known about whether priming in one modality changes PWA's performance in the other modality, crucial evidence needed for applying structural priming as a cost-effective intervention strategy for PWA. This study examined (a) whether production to comprehension cross-modality priming is effective in PWA, (b) whether priming-induced changes in syntactic comprehension lasted in the absence of an immediate prime, and (c) whether there is a significant correlation between individuals' priming effects and the change in their comprehension following priming. Thirteen PWA and 13 age-matched control participants completed a pre-test, a production-to-comprehension priming block, and a post-test. In the pre- and post-tests, participants completed a sentence-picture matching task with sentences involving interpretations of an ambiguous prepositional phrase (e.g., The teacher is poking the monk with a bat). Participants were free to choose a picture corresponding to a high attachment (HA; e.g., the teacher is using the bat to poke the monk) or a low attachment (LA; e.g., the monk is holding the bat) interpretation. In the priming block, participants produced LA sentences as primes and then completed a sentence-picture matching task for comprehension targets, similar to the pre-test. Age-matched controls and PWA showed a significant priming effect when comparing the priming block to the pre-test. In both groups, the priming effect persisted when comparing picture selections in the pre- and post-tests. At the individual level, age-matched controls who showed larger priming effects also selected more LA pictures in the post-test compared to the pre-test, indicating that the priming effect accounted for the magnitude of change from the pre- to post-test. This correlation was also found in PWA. These findings suggest that production-to-comprehension structural priming is effective and persistent in PWA and controls, in line with the view that structural priming is a form of implicit learning. Further, the findings suggest that syntactic representations are shared between modalities, and therefore, production influences future comprehension. Cross-modality structural priming may have clinical potential to improve sentence processing in PWA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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37. The Efficiency of Priming Techniques for the Word Recognition and Sentence Comprehension of EFL Learners: Conceptual and Perceptual Priming in Comparison.
- Author
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Khaghaninejad, Mohammad Saber
- Subjects
WORD recognition ,ENGLISH as a foreign language ,COMPREHENSION testing ,LANGUAGE ability ,LISTENING comprehension - Abstract
This study attempted to examine the impacts of conceptual and perceptual primes on the word recognition and sentence comprehension of beginner, intermediate and advanced EFL learners. Consequently, 246 EFL learners were recruited for study and categorized into three English proficiency levels. The needed data was collected via Lexical Decision Tasks (LDTs) and a constructed multiple-choice sentence comprehension test. The findings indicated that both priming techniques improved word recognition and sentence comprehension of the participants significantly, however the conceptual primes were more facilitative for both word recognition and sentence comprehension tasks. Moreover, language proficiency was found to be determinant of priming efficiency, in the way that, as the learners become more proficient their performance would be more positively affected by both conceptual and perceptual priming techniques. Finally, the pedagogical implications and suggestions are discussed in the light of the findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
38. Abstract word comprehension in sentences for primary school readers: its effects on first graders with different levels of equal sign knowledge proficiency
- Author
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Dong, Yang, Mo, Jianhong, Dong, Hang, Zheng, Hao-Yuan, and Zhang, Mingmin
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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39. Agent-first and pivot-second constraint effects in the online sentence processing of Tagalog flexible word order.
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Bondoc, Ivan and Schafer, Amy J.
- Subjects
TAGALOG language ,LITERATURE ,PSYCHOLINGUISTICS ,ARGUMENT ,COGNITION - Abstract
Multiple explanatory accounts of Tagalog word-order preferences have been proposed in the literature. We report three psycholinguistic experiments that investigate on-line comprehension patterns in Tagalog to illustrate the strength and consistency of two grammatical constraints in sentence processing (Bondoc and Schafer, 2022): a tendency for the agent to be placed in the first argument position (agent-first), and for the syntactically prominent argument (the pivot) to be placed in the second argument position (pivot-second). Our results show significant effects of these two constraints in the moment-by-moment reading of sentences, and also that their effects shift across measures and tasks. These outcomes contribute to the evidence of agent-first and pivot-second constraints influencing Tagalog word-order preferences and highlight their critical role in cognition and in Tagalog sentence processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
40. What a thousand children tell us about grammatical complexity and working memory: A cross-sectional analysis on the comprehension of clitics and passives in Italian.
- Author
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Moscati, Vincenzo, Marini, Andrea, and Biondo, Nicoletta
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY , *CROSS-sectional method , *COMPARATIVE grammar , *SPEECH evaluation , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Data from 996 Italian-speaking children were collected and analyzed to assess whether a movement-based notion of grammatical complexity is adequate to capture the developmental trend of clitics and passives in Italian. A second goal of the study was to address the relationship between working memory and syntactic development, exploring the hypothesis that higher digit span values predict better comprehension of complex matrix sentences. The results confirm the validity of a ranking of grammatical structures based on constituent movement, with both clitics and passives developing in parallel and later than canonical SVO sentences. Working memory also shows an effect on sentence comprehension in general, but standard measures (digit span forward/backward) do not show a selective advantage in handling complex constructions such as clitics and passives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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41. Comprehension of clitic pronouns by children with cochlear implants: the role of sentence stress.
- Author
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Fortunato-Tavares, Talita, Wilson, Miya, and Orazem, John
- Subjects
- *
COCHLEAR implants , *PROSODIC analysis (Linguistics) , *PRONOUNS (Grammar) , *ROMANCE languages , *PORTUGUESE language , *MORPHEMICS - Abstract
This study investigates the role of sentence stress on the comprehension of sentences with clitic pronouns (unstressed morphemes and a typical feature of Romance languages) by children with cochlear implants (CIs). Thirteen children (seven girls) with CIs and 15 children (seven girls) with NH between eight and 12 years who are monolingual speakers of Brazilian Portuguese participated on a computerized sentence comprehension task that involved manipulation of stress placement of possible antecedent words to clitic pronouns. Children with CIs were significantly less accurate than children with NH in comprehending sentences with clitics, regardless of sentence stress. For children with NH, stress on the correct antecedent significantly increased sentence comprehension accuracy. For children with CI, there was no significant effect of sentence stress on selecting the correct antecedent for clitic pronouns. Comprehension of sentences with clitic pronouns is challenging for children with CIs and this challenge holds cross-linguistically. Furthermore, children with CIs do not use prosodic information to support comprehension of sentences with clitics similarly to NH children. Language-specific syntactic, morphosyntactic, and prosodic contrasts affecting sentence comprehension need to be assessed in children with CIs to plan an effective intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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42. The role of working memory in the comprehension of syntactically complex sentences in children with and without developmental language disorder: a literature review
- Author
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Γαβριήλ Καραβασίλης, Κλεοπάτρα Διακογιώργη, and Δέσποινα Παπαδοπούλου
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working memory ,sentence comprehension ,syntactically complex sentences ,children ,typical language development ,developmental language disorder ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Working memory (WΜ) components are investigated as correlates of complex sentence comprehension (cSC) in children, under the consideration of WM as a cognitive system of limited capacity. The present study aims to investigate the relationship between WM components and cSC in children of typical language development (TLD) as well as in children with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD), by systematically reviewing relevant studies. First, different tasks that are used to assess three distinct WM components are presented and task purity considerations on each of them are taken into account. Second, syntactically complex sentence types that are considered to constrain the already limited resources of WM are presented. Then, the systematic methods of the PRISMA-P protocol are followed. Based on them, six databases were thoroughly searched. After an initial screening stage and a final evaluation stage, twenty-eight studies were found to meet the inclusion criteria. Narrative synthesis was performed on the included studies. In TLD children, results on the role of verbal short-term memory (vST) and verbal working memory (vWM) in cSC are inconclusive, either supporting or questioning the capacity-limit approach. In DLD children, verbal working memory (vWM) has an important effect on cSC, rather than verbal short-term memory (vSTM). This suggests that a processing-execution component is important in DLD children’s cSC. For both children groups, a component serving as an interface between vSTM/vWM and long-term memory (vSTM/vWM-LTM) seems to play an important role; however, it is greatly understudied. Based on the results, future research directions and educational implications are suggested.
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- 2023
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43. Morphological and conceptual influences on the real-time comprehension of optional plural marked sentences in Yucatec Maya.
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Butler, Lindsay K.
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MAYAS ,DECISION making ,COMPREHENSION - Abstract
Introduction: Psycholinguistic research often focuses on Indo-European and other commonly studied major languages, while typologically diverse languages remain understudied. In this paper, we examine the morphological and conceptual influences on the real-time comprehension of optional plural-marked sentences in Yucatec Maya, an indigenous language of Mexico with a less commonly studied optional plural marking system. Methods: Fifty-one speakers of Yucatec Maya participated in a picture-sentence matching experiment carried out in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico. Pictures of one, two, or seven humans or animals depicting an intransitive action (conceptual number) were paired with auditorily presented sentences that had no plural marking, one plural, or two plurals (morphological number). Participants indicated by key press whether the picture and the sentence were an acceptable match, and decision time was recorded. Results: In the analysis of decision (yes versus no) and accuracy, morphological and conceptual factors interacted. In the analysis of decision time, however, morphological plural marking, but not conceptual number, led to faster decisions. Discussion: In light of previous work on the role of conceptual factors in the computation of number agreement, the interaction between conceptual and morphological factors suggests that a language with optional plural marking (or low "morphological richness") is associated with high conceptual influence on sentence comprehension. Importantly, the results of this study expand the empirical base of language types that have been investigated using psycholinguistic methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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44. Do structure predictions persevere to multilinguals' other languages? Evidence from cross-linguistic structural priming in comprehension.
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Chen, Xuemei, Wang, Suiping, and Hartsuiker, Robert J.
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ENGLISH language , *LANGUAGE & languages , *EYE tracking , *FORECASTING , *VERBS , *MULTILINGUALISM - Abstract
Many cross-language sentence processing studies showed structural priming, which suggests a shared representation across languages or separate but interacting representations for each language. To investigate whether multilinguals can rely on such representations to predict structure in comprehension, we conducted two visual-world eye-tracking priming experiments with Cantonese–Mandarin-English multilinguals. Participants were instructed to read aloud prime sentences in either Cantonese, Mandarin, or English; then they heard a target sentence in Mandarin while looking at the corresponding target picture. When prime and target had different verbs, there was within-language structural priming only (Mandarin-to-Mandarin, Experiment 1). But when prime and target had translation-equivalent verbs, there was not only within-language but also between-language priming (only Cantonese-to-Mandarin, Experiment 2). These results indicate that structure prediction between languages in comprehension is partly lexically-based, so that cross-linguistic structural priming only occurs with cognate verbs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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45. Specific pattern of linguistic impairment in Parkinson's disease patients with subjective cognitive decline and mild cognitive impairment predicts dementia.
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Galtier, Iván, Nieto, Antonieta, Mata, María, Lorenzo, Jesús N., and Barroso, José
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MILD cognitive impairment , *PARKINSON'S disease , *COGNITION disorders , *DEMENTIA , *RELATIVE clauses , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Objective: Parkinson's disease patients with subjective cognitive decline (PD-SCD) and mild cognitive impairment (PD-MCI) have an increased risk of dementia (PDD). Thus, the identification of early cognitive changes that can be useful predictors of PDD is a highly relevant challenge. Posterior cortically based functions, including linguistic processes, have been associated with PDD. However, investigations that have focused on linguistic functions in PD-MCI are scarce and none of them include PD-SCD patients. Our aim was to study language performance in PD-SCD and PD-MCI. Moreover, language subcomponents were considered as predictors of PDD. Method: Forty-six PD patients and twenty controls were evaluated with a neuropsychological protocol. Patients were classified as PD-SCD and PD-MCI. Language production and comprehension was assessed. Follow-up assessment was conducted to a mean of 7.5 years after the baseline. Results: PD-MCI patients showed a poor performance in naming (actions and nouns), action generation, anaphora resolution and sentence comprehension (with and without center-embedded relative clause). PD-SCD showed a poor performance in action naming and action generation. Deficit in action naming was an independent risk factor for PDD during the follow-up. Moreover, the combination of deficit in action words and sentence comprehension without a center-embedded relative clause was associated with a greater risk. Conclusions: The results are of relevance because they suggest that a specific pattern of linguistic dysfunctions, that can be present even in the early stages of the disease, can predict future dementia, reinforcing the importance of advancing in the knowledge of linguistic dysfunctions in predementia stages of PD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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46. The role of verbal short‐term memory in complex sentence comprehension: An observational study on aphasia.
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Gilardone, Giulia, Viganò, Mauro, Costantini, Giulio, Monti, Alessia, Corbo, Massimo, Cecchetto, Carlo, and Papagno, Costanza
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- *
SCIENTIFIC observation , *COMPARATIVE grammar , *COGNITION , *APHASIA , *VERBAL behavior , *SHORT-term memory , *AGRAMMATISM , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: The comprehension profile of people with agrammatism is a debated topic. Syntactic complexity and cognitive resources, in particular phonological short‐term memory (pSTM), are considered as crucial components by different interpretative accounts. Aim: To investigate the interaction of syntactic complexity and of pSTM in sentence comprehension in a group of persons with aphasia with and without agrammatism. Methods & Procedures: A cohort of 30 participants presenting with aphasia was assessed for syntactic comprehension and for pSTM. A total of 15 presented with agrammatism and 15 had fluent aphasia. Outcomes & Results: Linear nested mixed‐model analyses revealed a significant interaction between sentence type and pSTM. In particular, participants with lower pSTM scores showed a reduced comprehension of centre‐embedded object relatives and long coordinated sentences. Moreover, a significant interaction was found between sentence type and agrammatism, with a lower performance for passives within the agrammatic group. Conclusions & Implications: These results confirm that pSTM is involved in the comprehension of complex structures with an important computational load, in particular coordinated sentences, and long‐distance filler gap dependencies. On the contrary, the specific deficit of the agrammatic group with passives is a pure syntactic deficit, with no involvement of pSTM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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47. Kako izvorni govornici hrvatskoga jezika razumiju druge slavenske jezike? Istraživanje metodom praćenja pokreta oka.
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Kudera, Jacek and Jagodar, Josip
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CROATIAN language ,SLAVIC languages ,MULTILINGUALISM ,EYE tracking - Abstract
Copyright of Suvremena Lingvistika is the property of Suvremena Lingvistika and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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48. Comprender lo desconocido: expectativas, relaciones semánticas y causalidad por defecto revisitada.
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Mariel Zunino, Gabriela
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UNIVERSAL language ,PRIOR learning ,RESEARCH personnel ,STUDENT interests ,INFORMATION processing ,READING comprehension - Abstract
Copyright of Lenguaje is the property of Universidad del Valle and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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49. Differentiation between Normal Cognition and Subjective Cognitive Decline in Older Adults Using Discrepancy Scores Derived from Neuropsychological Tests
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Ramón López-Higes, Susana Rubio-Valdehita, Sara M. Fernandes, and Pedro F. S. Rodrigues
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subjective cognitive decline ,discrepancy scores ,sentence comprehension ,naming ,memory ,executive functions ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Several studies have reported subtle differences in cognition between individuals with subjective cognitive decline (SCD) compared to those with normal cognition. This study aimed to (i) identify these differences using discrepancy scores (e.g., categorial–phonemic verbal fluency performance) derived from neuropsychological tests in three cognitive domains (memory: Wechsler’s Word List and Digits; executive functions: Stroop and verbal fluency; and language: BNT and ECCO_Senior) and (ii) determine which discrepancy scores are significant for classification. Seventy-five older adults were included: 32 who were labeled SCD+ (age 71.50 ± 5.29), meeting Jessen et al.’s criteria, and 43 in the normal cognition group (SCD−; age 69.81 ± 4.62). Both groups completed a protocol including screening and the specified neuropsychological tests. No differences were found between the groups in their age, education, episodic memory, global cognitive state, or mood. Significant differences between the groups were observed regarding the discrepancy scores derived from BNT (naming) and ECCO_Senior (sentence comprehension). These scores accurately classified participants (71.6%), with ECCO_Senior having a primary role. ROC curves indicated a poor-to-fair model quality or diagnostic accuracy (AUC_BNT = 0.690; AUC_ECCO = 0.722). In conclusion, discrepancy scores in the language domain are important for distinguishing between individuals with SCD and normal cognition, complementing previous findings in this domain. However, given their relatively poor diagnostic accuracy, they should be used with caution as part of a more detailed neuro-psychological assessment.
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- 2024
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50. Interactions Between Audition and Cognition in Hearing Loss and Aging
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Rogers, Chad S., Peelle, Jonathan E., Fay, Richard R., Series Editor, Popper, Arthur N., Series Editor, Avraham, Karen, Editorial Board Member, Bass, Andrew, Editorial Board Member, Cunningham, Lisa, Editorial Board Member, Fritzsch, Bernd, Editorial Board Member, Groves, Andrew, Editorial Board Member, Hertzano, Ronna, Editorial Board Member, Le Prell, Colleen, Editorial Board Member, Litovsky, Ruth, Editorial Board Member, Manis, Paul, Editorial Board Member, Manley, Geoffrey, Editorial Board Member, Moore, Brian, Editorial Board Member, Simmons, Andrea, Editorial Board Member, Yost, William, Editorial Board Member, Holt, Lori L., editor, Peelle, Jonathan E., editor, and Coffin, Allison B., editor
- Published
- 2022
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