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Hierarchy, Not Lexical Regularity, Modulates Low-Frequency Neural Synchrony During Language Comprehension. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Neural responses may synchronize with sentence structure, raising debate on whether this reflects hierarchical or lexical information.
  • Research used computational simulations showing similar power spectra from lexical information alone, suggesting sentence-level tracking might be driven by lexical patterns rather than syntax.
  • Experimental EEG data revealed strong delta synchronization for grammatically correct sentences but not for reversed phrases, supporting the hierarchical model over the lexical one.

Article Abstract

Neural responses appear to synchronize with sentence structure. However, researchers have debated whether this response in the delta band (0.5-3 Hz) really reflects hierarchical information or simply lexical regularities. Computational simulations in which sentences are represented simply as sequences of high-dimensional numeric vectors that encode lexical information seem to give rise to power spectra similar to those observed for sentence synchronization, suggesting that sentence-level cortical tracking findings may reflect sequential lexical or part-of-speech information, and not necessarily hierarchical syntactic information. Using electroencephalography (EEG) data and the frequency-tagging paradigm, we develop a novel experimental condition to tease apart the predictions of the lexical and the hierarchical accounts of the attested low-frequency synchronization. Under a lexical model, synchronization should be observed even when words are reversed within their phrases (e.g., "sheep white grass eat" instead of "white sheep eat grass"), because the same lexical items are preserved at the same regular intervals. Critically, such stimuli are not syntactically well-formed; thus a hierarchical model does not predict synchronization of phrase- and sentence-level structure in the reversed phrase condition. Computational simulations confirm these diverging predictions. EEG data from = 31 native speakers of Mandarin show robust delta synchronization to syntactically well-formed isochronous speech. Importantly, no such pattern is observed for reversed phrases, consistent with the hierarchical, but not the lexical, accounts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10158645PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/nol_a_00077DOI Listing

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