4.4 Article

Oscillatory correlates of linguistic prediction and modality effects during listening to auditory-only and audiovisual sentences

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue -, Pages 9-21

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2022.06.003

Keywords

Oscillations; Prediction; Audiovisual speech; Sentence processing

Funding

  1. French National Research Agency
  2. European funds through the FEDER SCV-IrDIVE program
  3. University of Lille
  4. [ANR-11- EQPX-0023]
  5. [ANR-19-CE28-0006]

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Understanding spoken sentences in natural listening situations requires interactions between multiple sensory levels and linguistic levels. This study found that neural oscillations involved in word prediction based on prior sentence context increased in more challenging listening situations.
In natural listening situations, understanding spoken sentences requires interactions between several multisen-sory to linguistic levels of information. In two electroencephalographical studies, we examined the neuronal oscillations of linguistic prediction produced by unimodal and bimodal sentence listening to observe how these brain correlates were affected by the sensory streams delivering linguistic information. Sentence contexts which were strongly predictive of a particular word were ended by a possessive adjective matching or not the gender of the predicted word. Alpha, beta and gamma oscillations were investigated as they were considered to play a crucial role in the predictive process. During the audiovisual or auditory-only listening to sentences, no evidence of word prediction was observed. In contrast, in a more challenging listening situation during which bimodal audiovisual streams switched to unimodal auditory stream, gamma power was sensitive to word prediction based on prior sentence context. Results suggest that prediction spreading from higher sentence levels to lower word levels is optional during unimodal and bimodal sentence listening and is observed when the listening situation is more challenging. Alpha and beta oscillations were found to decrease when semantically constraining sentences were delivered in the audiovisual modality in comparison with the auditory-only modality. Altogether, our findings bear major implications for our understanding of the neural mechanisms that support predictive pro-cessing in multimodal language comprehension.

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