4.4 Article

Establishing Causal Coherence across Sentences: An ERP Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages 1230-1246

Publisher

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/jocn.2010.21452

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [RO1 MH02034]
  2. National Alliance for Research in Schizophrenia and Depression (NARSAD)
  3. Sidney J. Baer Trust

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This study examined neural activity associated with establishing causal relationships across sentences during on-line comprehension. ERPs were measured while participants read and judged the relatedness of three-sentence scenarios in which the final sentence was highly causally related, intermediately related, and causally unrelated to its context. Lexico-semantic co-occurrence was matched across the three conditions using a Latent Semantic Analysis. Critical words in causally unrelated scenarios evoked a larger N400 than words in both highly causally related and intermediately related scenarios, regardless of whether they appeared before or at the sentence-final position. At midline sites, the N400 to intermediately related sentence-final words was attenuated to the same degree as to highly causally related words, but otherwise the N400 to intermediately related words fell in between that evoked by highly causally related and intermediately related words. Nomodulation of the late positivity/P600 component was observed across conditions. These results indicate that both simple and complex causal inferences can influence the earliest stages of semantically processing an incoming word. Further, they suggest that causal coherence, at the situation level, can influence incremental word-by-word discourse comprehension, even when semantic relationships between individual words are matched.

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