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Prosodic expectations in silent reading: ERP evidence from rhyme scheme and semantic congruence in classic Chinese poems.

Authors :
Chen, Qingrong
Zhang, Jingjing
Xu, Xiaodong
Scheepers, Christoph
Yang, Yiming
Tanenhaus, Michael K.
Source :
Cognition. Sep2016, Vol. 154, p11-21. 11p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

In an ERP study, classic Chinese poems with a well-known rhyme scheme were used to generate an expectation of a rhyme in the absence of an expectation for a specific character. Critical characters were either consistent or inconsistent with the expected rhyme scheme and semantically congruent or incongruent with the content of the poem. These stimuli allowed us to examine whether a top-down rhyme scheme expectation would affect relatively early components of the ERP associated with character-to-sound mapping (P200) and lexically-mediated semantic processing (N400). The ERP data revealed that rhyme scheme congruence, but not semantic congruence modulated the P200: rhyme-incongruent characters elicited a P200 effect across the head demonstrating that top-down expectations influence early phonological coding of the character before lexical-semantic processing. Rhyme scheme incongruence also produced a right-lateralized N400-like effect. Moreover, compared to semantically congruous poems, semantically incongruous poems produced a larger N400 response only when the character was consistent with the expected rhyme scheme. The results suggest that top-down prosodic expectations can modulate early phonological processing in visual word recognition, indicating that prosodic expectations might play an important role in silent reading. They also suggest that semantic processing is influenced by general knowledge of text genre. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00100277
Volume :
154
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cognition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
116652916
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2016.05.007