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Information structure effects on the processing of nouns and verbs: evidence from event-related brain potentials

Emanuela Piciucco, Viviana Masia, Emanuele Maiorana, Edoardo Lombardi Vallauri, Patrizio Campisi

2022Language and Cognition62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Electroencephalographic (EEG) signals can reveal the cost required to deal with information structure mismatches in speech or in text contexts. The present study investigates the costs related to the processing of different associations between the syntactic categories of Noun and Verb and the information categories of Topic and Focus. It is hypothesized that – due to the very nature (respectively, predicative and non-predicative) of verbal and nominal reference – sentences with Topics realized by verbs, and Focuses realized by nouns, should impose greater processing demands, compared to the decoding of nominal Topics and verbal Focuses. Data from event-related potential (ERP) measurements revealed an N400 effect in response to both nouns encoded as Focus and verbs packaged as Topic, confirming that the cost associated with information structure processing follows discourse-driven expectations also with respect to the word-class level.

Topics & Concepts

Predicative expressionN400NounFocus (optics)VerbComputer scienceNatural language processingPart of speechLinguisticsArtificial intelligencePsychologyInformation processingEvent-related potentialCognitionCognitive psychologyPhilosophyPhysicsNeuroscienceOpticsNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismReading and Literacy DevelopmentEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces