Inhibition of lexical representations after violated semantic predictions

被引:0
|
作者
Kim, Jina [1 ]
Wessel, Jan R. [2 ,3 ]
Hendrickson, Kristi [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Iowa, Dept Commun Sci & Disorders, 250 Hawkins Dr, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA
[2] Univ Iowa, Dept Psychol & Brain Sci, 376 Psychol & Brain Sci Bldg,340 Iowa Ave, Iowa City, IA 52240 USA
[3] Univ Iowa Hosp & Clin, Dept Neurol, 250 Hawkins Dr, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA
关键词
Prediction; Inhibition; Semantic violation; Sentence processing; Lexical decision; UNEXPECTED EVENTS; SENTENCE COMPREHENSION; BRAIN POTENTIALS; UPCOMING WORDS; EYE-MOVEMENTS; MEMORY; FACILITATION; ACTIVATION; CONSTRAINT; SURPRISE;
D O I
10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105585
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
There is a consensus that humans predict upcoming words during sentence processing. Prediction makes language comprehension fast and efficient if this anticipatory processing is accurate. However, often times, predictions are not correct. There is a lack of research investigating the cognitive operations at play when predictions are violated. According to several proposals, such violations lead to an inhibition of the predicted word to facilitate the integration of the unexpected word. Across four experiments, we have tested whether predicted words are indeed inhibited when listeners encounter unexpected stimuli, and whether the linguistic status (word or sound) and semantic congruency of a word (plausible or implausible) influences this purported inhibitory process. Using a Cross-Modal Lexical Priming paradigm, we showed that when predictions are violated, the activation of the predicted word is inhibited, resulting in increased reaction times. These inhibitory effects appear to be language specific, in that they are only observed after unexpected words, as opposed to nonlinguistic sounds (tones). However, contrary to a long-held assumption in the field of sentence processing, inhibitory effects are not modulated by the semantic congruency of the unexpected word (i.e., whether the unexpected word is plausible within the sentence context). Indeed, in the current study, any linguistic information that violated listeners' semantic prediction resulted in the inhibition of the predicted word. Thus, the current findings are more compatible with a view in which unexpected linguistic events that are meaningful engage inhibitory processes with the specific purpose of inhibiting the predicted, though out-of-date, word.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Body schematics: On the role of the body schema in embodied lexical-semantic representations
    Rueschemeyer, Shirley-Ann
    Pfeiffer, Christian
    Bekkering, Harold
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2010, 48 (03) : 774 - 781
  • [22] Evoked potentials and access to lexical-semantic representations of words perceived unconsciously
    Meligne, Deborah
    [J]. REVUE FRANCAISE DE LINGUISTIQUE APPLIQUEE, 2012, 17 (02): : 49 - 63
  • [23] Color perception involves color representations firstly at a semantic level and then at a lexical level
    Loïc P. Heurley
    Thibaut Brouillet
    Gabrielle Chesnoy
    Denis Brouillet
    [J]. Cognitive Processing, 2013, 14 : 19 - 29
  • [24] Violated specialness - Western political representations of Tibet
    Barnett, R
    [J]. IMAGINING TIBET: PERCEPTIONS, PROJECTIONS, AND FANTASIES, 2001, : 269 - 316
  • [25] Competitive inhibition models of lexical-semantic processing: Experimental evidence
    Gurd, JM
    Oliveira, RM
    [J]. BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 1996, 54 (03) : 414 - 433
  • [26] Short-term retention of lexical-semantic representations: Implications for speech production
    Martin, RC
    Freedman, ML
    [J]. MEMORY, 2001, 9 (4-6) : 261 - 280
  • [27] The effect of a bilingual learning mode on the establishment of lexical semantic representations in the L2
    Elgort, Irina
    Piasecki, Anna E.
    [J]. BILINGUALISM-LANGUAGE AND COGNITION, 2014, 17 (03) : 572 - 588
  • [28] Learning semantic sentence representations from visually grounded language without lexical knowledge
    Merkx, Danny
    Frank, Stefan L.
    [J]. NATURAL LANGUAGE ENGINEERING, 2019, 25 (04) : 451 - 466
  • [29] Lexical semantic therapy
    Mazzoni, M
    Vista, M
    [J]. APHASIOLOGY, 1997, 11 (11) : 1096 - 1100
  • [30] Lexical Semantic Recognition
    Liu, Nelson F.
    Hershcovich, Daniel
    Kranzlein, Michael
    Schneider, Nathan
    [J]. MWE 2021: THE 17TH WORKSHOP ON MULTIWORD EXPRESSIONS, 2021, : 49 - 56