Behavioral and Brain Functions (Mar 2018)

Left centro-parieto-temporal response to tool–gesture incongruity: an ERP study

  • Yi-Tzu Chang,
  • Hsiang-Yu Chen,
  • Yuan-Chieh Huang,
  • Wan-Yu Shih,
  • Hsiao-Lung Chan,
  • Ping-Yi Wu,
  • Ling-Fu Meng,
  • Chen-Chi Chen,
  • Ching-I Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12993-018-0138-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Action semantics have been investigated in relation to context violation but remain less examined in relation to the meaning of gestures. In the present study, we examined tool–gesture incongruity by event-related potentials (ERPs) and hypothesized that the component N400, a neural index which has been widely used in both linguistic and action semantic congruence, is significant for conditions of incongruence. Methods Twenty participants performed a tool–gesture judgment task, in which they were asked to judge whether the tool–gesture pairs were correct or incorrect, for the purpose of conveying functional expression of the tools. Online electroencephalograms and behavioral performances (the accuracy rate and reaction time) were recorded. Results The ERP analysis showed a left centro-parieto-temporal N300 effect (220–360 ms) for the correct condition. However, the expected N400 (400–550 ms) could not be differentiated between correct/incorrect conditions. After 700 ms, a prominent late negative complex for the correct condition was also found in the left centro-parieto-temporal area. Conclusions The neurophysiological findings indicated that the left centro-parieto-temporal area is the predominant region contributing to neural processing for tool–gesture incongruity in right-handers. The temporal dynamics of tool–gesture incongruity are: (1) firstly enhanced for recognizable tool–gesture using patterns, (2) and require a secondary reanalysis for further examination of the highly complicated visual structures of gestures and tools. The evidence from the tool–gesture incongruity indicated altered brain activities attributable to the N400 in relation to lexical and action semantics. The online interaction between gesture and tool processing provided minimal context violation or anticipation effect, which may explain the missing N400.

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