27 research outputs found
Single-trial neurodynamics reveal N400 and P600 coupling in language comprehension
Theories of the electrophysiology of language comprehension are mostly informed by event-related potential effects
observed between condition averages. We here argue that a dissociation between competing effect-level explanations of
event-related potentials can be achieved by turning to predictions and analyses at the single-trial level. Specifically, we
examine the single-trial dynamics in event-related potential data that exhibited a biphasic N400–P600 effect pattern. A
group of multi-stream models can explain biphasic effects by positing that each individual trial should induce either an
N400 increase or a P600 increase, but not both. An alternative, single-stream account, Retrieval-Integration theory,
explicitly predicts that N400 amplitude and P600 amplitude should be correlated at the single-trial level. In order to
investigate the single-trial dynamics of the N400 and the P600, we apply a regression-based technique in which we
quantify the extent to which N400 amplitudes are predictive of the electroencephalogram in the P600 time window. Our
findings suggest that, indeed, N400 amplitudes and P600 amplitudes are inversely correlated within-trial and, hence, the
N400 effect and the P600 effect in biphasic data are driven by the same trials. Critically, we demonstrate that this finding
also extends to data which exhibited only monophasic effects between conditions. In sum, the observation that the N400 is
inversely correlated with the P600 on a by-trial basis supports a single stream view, such as Retrieval-Integration theory,
and is difficult to reconcile with the processing mechanisms proposed by multi-stream models
The P600 as a continuous index of integration effort
The integration of word meaning into an unfolding utterance representation is
a core operation of incremental language comprehension. There is considerable
debate, however, as to which component of the ERP signal—the N400 or the
P600—directly reflects integrative processes, with far reaching consequences for
the temporal organization and architecture of the comprehension system. Multistream models maintaining the N400 as integration crucially rely on the presence of a semantically attractive plausible alternative interpretation to account
for the absence of an N400 effect in response to certain semantic anomalies, as
reported in previous studies. The single-stream Retrieval–Integration account
posits the P600 as an index of integration, further predicting that its amplitude
varies continuously with integrative effort. Here, we directly test these competing
hypotheses using a context manipulation design in which a semantically attractive alternative is either available or not, and target word plausibility is varied
across three levels. An initial self-paced reading study revealed graded reading
timesfor plausibility,suggesting differential integration effort. A subsequent ERP
study showed no N400 differences across conditions, and that P600 amplitude is
graded for plausibility. These findings are inconsistent with the interpretation
of the N400 as an index of integration, as no N400 effect emerged even in the
absence of a semantically attractive alternative. By contrast, the link between
plausibility, reading times, and P600 amplitude supports the view that the P600
is a continuous index of integration effort. More generally, our results support a
single-stream architecture and eschew the need for multi-stream accounts
Retrieval (N400) and integration (P600) in expectation-based comprehension
Expectation-based theories of language processing, such as Surprisal theory, are supported by evidence of anticipation effects in both behavioural and neurophysiological measures. Online measures of language processing, however, are known to be influenced by factors such as lexical association that are distinct from-but often confounded with-expectancy. An open question therefore is whether a specific locus of expectancy related effects can be established in neural and behavioral processing correlates. We address this question in an event-related potential experiment and a self-paced reading experiment that independently cross expectancy and lexical association in a context manipulation design. We find that event-related potentials reveal that the N400 is sensitive to both expectancy and lexical association, while the P600 is modulated only by expectancy. Reading times, in turn, reveal effects of both association and expectancy in the first spillover region, followed by effects of expectancy alone in the second spillover region. These findings are consistent with the Retrieval-Integration account of language comprehension, according to which lexical retrieval (N400) is facilitated for words that are both expected and associated, whereas integration difficulty (P600) will be greater for unexpected words alone. Further, an exploratory analysis suggests that the P600 is not merely sensitive to expectancy violations, but rather, that there is a continuous relation. Taken together, these results suggest that the P600, like reading times, may reflect a meaning-centric notion of Surprisal in language comprehension.SFB 1102, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaf
Single-trial neurodynamics reveal N400 and P600 coupling in language comprehension
Theories of the electrophysiology of language comprehension are mostly informed by event-related potential effects observed between condition averages. We here argue that a dissociation between competing effect-level explanations of event-related potentials can be achieved by turning to predictions and analyses at the single-trial level. Specifically, we examine the single-trial dynamics in event-related potential data that exhibited a biphasic N400–P600 effect pattern. A group of multi-stream models can explain biphasic effects by positing that each individual trial should induce either an N400 increase or a P600 increase, but not both. An alternative, single-stream account, Retrieval-Integration theory, explicitly predicts that N400 amplitude and P600 amplitude should be correlated at the single-trial level. In order to investigate the single-trial dynamics of the N400 and the P600, we apply a regression-based technique in which we quantify the extent to which N400 amplitudes are predictive of the electroencephalogram in the P600 time window. Our findings suggest that, indeed, N400 amplitudes and P600 amplitudes are inversely correlated within-trial and, hence, the N400 effect and the P600 effect in biphasic data are driven by the same trials. Critically, we demonstrate that this finding also extends to data which exhibited only monophasic effects between conditions. In sum, the observation that the N400 is inversely correlated with the P600 on a by-trial basis supports a single stream view, such as Retrieval-Integration theory, and is difficult to reconcile with the processing mechanisms proposed by multi-stream models
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On the limits of LLM surprisal as functional Explanation of ERPs
Surprisal values from large language models (LLMs) have been used to model the amplitude of the N400.
This ERP component is sensitive not only to contextual word expectancy but also to semantic association, such that unexpected but associated words do not always induce an N400 increase.
While LLMs are also sensitive to association, it remains unclear how they behave in these cases.
Moreover, another ERP component, the P600, has shown graded sensitivity to plausibility-driven expectancy, while remaining insensitive to association; however, its relationship to LLM surprisal is not well researched yet.
In an rERP analysis, we evaluate surprisal values of two unidirectional transformers on their ability to model N400 and P600 effects observed in three German ERP studies isolating the effects of association, plausibility, and expectancy.
We find that surprisal predicts an N400 increase for associated but implausible words, even when no such increase was observed in humans.
Furthermore, LLM surprisal accounts for P600 effects elicited by violations of selectional restrictions, but captures neither P600 effects from more subtle script knowledge violations nor graded P600 modulations.
The results of our investigation call into question the extent to which LLM surprisal offers an accurate characterisation of the functional generators of either the N400 or P600
The P600 as a continuous index of integration effort
The integration of word meaning into an unfolding utterance representation is a core operation of incremental language comprehension. There is considerable debate, however, as to which component of the ERP signal— the N400 or the P600— directly reflects integrative processes, with far reaching consequences for the temporal organization and architecture of the comprehension system. Multi- stream models maintaining the N400 as integration crucially rely on the pres-ence of a semantically attractive plausible alternative interpretation to account for the absence of an N400 effect in response to certain semantic anomalies, as reported in previous studies. The single- stream Retrieval– Integration account posits the P600 as an index of integration, further predicting that its amplitude varies continuously with integrative effort. Here, we directly test these competing hypotheses using a context manipulation design in which a semantically attrac-tive alternative is either available or not, and target word plausibility is varied across three levels. An initial self- paced reading study revealed graded reading times for plausibility, suggesting differential integration effort. A subsequent ERP study showed no N400 differences across conditions, and that P600 amplitude is graded for plausibility. These findings are inconsistent with the interpretation of the N400 as an index of integration, as no N400 effect emerged even in the absence of a semantically attractive alternative. By contrast, the link between plausibility, reading times, and P600 amplitude supports the view that the P600 is a continuous index of integration effort. More generally, our results support a single- stream architecture and eschew the need for multi- stream accounts
Austrian Studies, 27 (2019): Placing Schnitzler
The intensive editorial work currently being undertaken by teams in Austria, Germany and Great Britain is providing substantial new resources for academic study of and creative engagement with the work of Arthur Schnitzler (1862-1931), opening up new avenues of research and revealing previously obscured and unknown aspects of his writing processes and creative identity. while the writer himself bemoaned the tendency to view his work through the clichéd lens of recurrent themes (love, sex, dream, play, death), this volume explores where the twenty-first century is placing Schnitzler