Frontiers in Psychology (Dec 2022)

Neural correlates of linguistic collocations during continuous speech perception

  • Armine Garibyan,
  • Armine Garibyan,
  • Achim Schilling,
  • Achim Schilling,
  • Claudia Boehm,
  • Claudia Boehm,
  • Claudia Boehm,
  • Alexandra Zankl,
  • Alexandra Zankl,
  • Alexandra Zankl,
  • Patrick Krauss,
  • Patrick Krauss,
  • Patrick Krauss,
  • Patrick Krauss

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1076339
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Language is fundamentally predictable, both on a higher schematic level as well as low-level lexical items. Regarding predictability on a lexical level, collocations are frequent co-occurrences of words that are often characterized by high strength of association. So far, psycho- and neurolinguistic studies have mostly employed highly artificial experimental paradigms in the investigation of collocations by focusing on the processing of single words or isolated sentences. In contrast, here we analyze EEG brain responses recorded during stimulation with continuous speech, i.e., audio books. We find that the N400 response to collocations is significantly different from that of non-collocations, whereas the effect varies with respect to cortical region (anterior/posterior) and laterality (left/right). Our results are in line with studies using continuous speech, and they mostly contradict those using artificial paradigms and stimuli. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first neurolinguistic study on collocations using continuous speech stimulation.

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