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“Entraining” to speech, generating language?

Lars Meyer, Yue Sun, Andrea E. Martin

2020Language Cognition and Neuroscience43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Could meaning be read from acoustics, or from the refraction rate of pyramidal cells innervated by the cochlea, everyone would be an omniglot. Speech does not contain sufficient acoustic cues to identify linguistic units such as morphemes, words, and phrases without prior knowledge. Our target article (Meyer, L., Sun, Y., & Martin, A. E. (2019). Synchronous, but not entrained: Exogenous and endogenous cortical rhythms of speech and language processing. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1080/23273798.2019.1693050) thus questioned the concept of “entrainment” of neural oscillations to such units. We suggested that synchronicity with these points to the existence of endogenous functional “oscillators”—or population rhythmic activity in Giraud’s (2020) terms—that underlie the inference, generation, and prediction of linguistic units. Here, we address a series of inspirational commentaries by our colleagues. As apparent from these, some issues raised by our target article have already been raised in the literature. Psycho– and neurolinguists might still benefit from our reply, as “oscillations are an old concept in vision and motor functions, but a new one in linguistics” (Giraud, A.-L. 2020. Oscillations for all A commentary on Meyer, Sun & Martin (2020). Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, 1–8).

Topics & Concepts

Entrainment (biomusicology)NeurolinguisticsCognitive scienceCognitionLinguisticsPsychologyMeaning (existential)Embodied cognitionPopulationMorphemeSpeech productionRhythmCognitive psychologyCommunicationNeuroscienceComputer sciencePsycholinguisticsArtificial intelligencePhilosophySociologyAestheticsDemographyPsychotherapistNeural dynamics and brain functionMultisensory perception and integrationPlant and Biological Electrophysiology Studies
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