Brain Sciences (Apr 2022)

Induced and Evoked Brain Activation Related to the Processing of Onomatopoetic Verbs

  • Dorian Röders,
  • Anne Klepp,
  • Alfons Schnitzler,
  • Katja Biermann-Ruben,
  • Valentina Niccolai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12040481
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. 481

Abstract

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Grounded cognition theory postulates that cognitive processes related to motor or sensory content are processed by brain networks involved in motor execution and perception, respectively. Processing words with auditory features was shown to activate the auditory cortex. Our study aimed at determining whether onomatopoetic verbs (e.g., “tröpfeln”—to dripple), whose articulation reproduces the sound of respective actions, engage the auditory cortex more than non-onomatopoetic verbs. Alpha and beta brain frequencies as well as evoked-related fields (ERFs) were targeted as potential neurophysiological correlates of this linguistic auditory quality. Twenty participants were measured with magnetoencephalography (MEG) while semantically processing visually presented onomatopoetic and non-onomatopoetic German verbs. While a descriptively stronger left temporal alpha desynchronization for onomatopoetic verbs did not reach statistical significance, a larger ERF for onomatopoetic verbs emerged at about 240 ms in the centro-parietal area. Findings suggest increased cortical activation related to onomatopoeias in linguistically relevant areas.

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