Journal
BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci9080192
Keywords
implicit prosody; reading; meter; rhythm; lexical stress; event-related potentials; poetry
Categories
Funding
- James S. McDonnell Foundation Scholar Award in Understanding Human Cognition
- Harap Scholarship Fund Award
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Under the Implicit Prosody Hypothesis, readers generate prosodic structures during silent reading that can direct their real-time interpretations of the text. In the current study, we investigated the processing of implicit meter by recording event-related potentials (ERPs) while participants read a series of 160 rhyming couplets, where the rhyme target was always a stress-alternating noun-verb homograph (e.g., permit, which is pronounced PERmit as a noun and perMIT as a verb). The target had a strong-weak or weak-strong stress pattern, which was either consistent or inconsistent with the stress expectation generated by the couplet. Inconsistent strong-weak targets elicited negativities between 80-155 ms and 325-375 ms relative to consistent strong-weak targets; inconsistent weak-strong targets elicited a positivity between 365-435 ms relative to consistent weak-strong targets. These results are largely consistent with effects of metric violations during listening, demonstrating that implicit prosodic representations are similar to explicit prosodic representations.
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