3.8 Article

Lexical Frequency and Sentence Context Influence the Brain's Response to Single Words

期刊

NEUROBIOLOGY OF LANGUAGE
卷 3, 期 1, 页码 149-179

出版社

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/nol_a_00054

关键词

sentence reading; lexical frequency; prediction; context; hyperalignment; magnetoencephalography

资金

  1. Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NL) [864.14.011]

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This study found that lexical frequency has an independent effect on word processing, while contextual constraints affect word-level brain responses. Lexical frequency and predictability may have independent influences in the early and late stages of word processing, and interact in the late stage.
Typical adults read remarkably quickly. Such fast reading is facilitated by brain processes that are sensitive to both word frequency and contextual constraints. It is debated as to whether these attributes have additive or interactive effects on language processing in the brain. We investigated this issue by analysing existing magnetoencephalography data from 99 participants reading intact and scrambled sentences. Using a cross-validated model comparison scheme, we found that lexical frequency predicted the word-by-word elicited MEG signal in a widespread cortical network, irrespective of sentential context. In contrast, index (ordinal word position) was more strongly encoded in sentence words, in left front-temporal areas. This confirms that frequency influences word processing independently of predictability, and that contextual constraints affect word-by-word brain responses. With a conservative multiple comparisons correction, only the interaction between lexical frequency and surprisal survived, in anterior temporal and frontal cortex, and not between lexical frequency and entropy, nor between lexical frequency and index. However, interestingly, the uncorrected index x frequency interaction revealed an effect in left frontal and temporal cortex that reversed in time and space for intact compared to scrambled sentences. Finally, we provide evidence to suggest that, in sentences, lexical frequency and predictability may independently influence early (<150 ms) and late stages of word processing, but also interact during late stages of word processing (>150-250 ms), thus helping to converge previous contradictory eye-tracking and electrophysiological literature. Current neurocognitive models of reading would benefit from accounting for these differing effects of lexical frequency and predictability on different stages of word processing.

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