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Exploring the Role of Deontic Reasoning and World Knowledge in Wason´s Selection Task
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Coercion and compositionality.

Giosuè Baggio1, Travis Choma, Michiel van Lambalgen

  • 1Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. giosue.baggio@mpi.nl

Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
|July 9, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Complement coercion, a linguistic phenomenon where meaning is derived without explicit syntax, involves unique brain activity. Event-related potentials (ERPs) reveal a distinct negative shift during this process, differing from standard N400 effects.

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Area of Science:

  • Psycholinguistics
  • Cognitive Neuroscience of Language
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Semantic and syntactic language processing show distinct neurophysiological patterns (e.g., N400, P600).
  • Limited research exists on the neural basis of the syntax-semantics interface.
  • Fewer studies explore semantic composition independent of syntax, like complement coercion.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Investigate the neural underpinnings of complement coercion using event-related potentials (ERPs).
  • Examine how the brain processes sentences requiring inferred semantic information.
  • Analyze the neurocognitive and formal semantic aspects of complement coercion.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized event-related potentials (ERPs) to record brain activity.
  • Compared neural responses to sentences with explicit verb phrases versus those requiring complement coercion (e.g., 'The journalist wrote the article' vs. 'The journalist began the article').
  • Analyzed the temporal and spatial characteristics of ERP components.

Main Results:

  • Complement coercion elicited a prolonged negative shift in ERPs.
  • This negative shift differed in duration from the standard N400 effect associated with semantic processing.
  • Findings align with previous reading time, eye-tracking, and magnetoencephalography (MEG) studies.

Conclusions:

  • Complement coercion involves distinct neural computations beyond standard semantic or syntactic processing.
  • The observed ERP effects provide evidence for the cognitive mechanisms underlying inferred meaning in language.
  • Results contribute to understanding the complex interplay between syntax, semantics, and neural activity in language comprehension.