4.7 Article

Neurophysiological correlates of automatic integration of voice and gender information during grammatical processing

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-14478-2

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Funding

  1. University of Salamanca

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During verbal communication, both linguistic and extralinguistic information play important roles. However, the neural mechanisms of processing extralinguistic information are not well understood. In this study, EEG recordings were used to investigate the neural responses to Russian pronoun-verb phrases presented in different voices. The results showed that the brain responded differently to congruent and incongruent combinations of voice and grammatical gender, suggesting the existence of a rapid automatic syntactic integration mechanism sensitive to both linguistic and extralinguistic information.
During verbal communication, interlocutors rely on both linguistic (e.g., words, syntax) and extralinguistic (e.g., voice quality) information. The neural mechanisms of extralinguistic information processing are particularly poorly understood. To address this, we used EEG and recorded event-related brain potentials while participants listened to Russian pronoun-verb phrases presented in either male or female voice. Crucially, we manipulated congruency between the grammatical gender signaled by the verbs' ending and the speakers' apparent gender. To focus on putative automatic integration of extralinguistic information into syntactic processing and avoid confounds arising from secondary top-down processes, we used passive non-attend auditory presentation with visual distraction and no stimulus-related task. Most expressed neural responses were found at both early (150 ms, ELAN-like) and late (400 ms, N400-like) phrase processing stages. Crucially, both of these brain responses exhibited sensitivity to extralinguistic information and were significantly enhanced for phrases whose voice and grammatical gender were incongruent, similar to what is known for ERPs effects related to overt grammatical violations. Our data suggest a high degree of automaticity in processing extralinguistic information during spoken language comprehension which indicates existence of a rapid automatic syntactic integration mechanism sensitive to both linguistic and extralinguistic information.

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