Electrophysiological Evidence for the Continuous Processing of Linguistic Categories of Regular and Irregular Verb Inflection in German

被引:20
作者
Smolka, Eva [1 ]
Khader, Patrick H. [2 ,3 ]
Wiese, Richard [2 ]
Zwitserlood, Pienie [4 ]
Roesler, Frank [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Konstanz, D-78457 Constance, Germany
[2] Univ Marburg, D-35032 Marburg, Germany
[3] Univ Munich, D-81377 Munich, Germany
[4] Univ Munster, Munster, Germany
[5] Univ Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
关键词
EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS; ENGLISH PAST-TENSE; MORPHOLOGICALLY COMPLEX WORDS; SPREADING-ACTIVATION THEORY; BRAIN POTENTIALS; LEXICAL DECISION; REPETITION; LANGUAGE; ERP; DECOMPOSITION;
D O I
10.1162/jocn_a_00384
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
A central question concerning word recognition is whether linguistic categories are processed in continuous or categorical ways, in particular, whether regular and irregular inflection is stored and processed by the same or by distinct systems. Here, we contribute to this issue by contrasting regular (regular stem, regular suffix) with semi-irregular (regular stem, irregular suffix) and irregular (irregular stem, irregular suffix) participle formation in a visual priming experiment on German verb inflection. We measured ERPs and RTs and manipulated the inflectional and meaning relatedness between primes and targets. Inflected verb targets (e. g., leite, "head") were preceded either by themselves, by their participle (geleitet, "headed"), by a semantically related verb in the same inflection as the target (fuhre, "guide") or in the participle form (gefuhrt, "guided"), or by an unrelated verb in the same inflection (nenne, "name"). Results showed that behavioral and ERP priming effects were gradually affected by verb regularity. Regular participles produced a widely distributed frontal and parietal effect, irregular participles produced a small left parietal effect, and semi-irregular participles yielded an effect in-between these two in terms of amplitude and topography. The behavioral and ERP effects further showed that the priming because of participles differs from that because of semantic associates for all verb types. These findings argue for a single processing system that generates participle priming effects for regular, semi-irregular, and irregular verb inflection. Together, the findings provide evidence that the linguistic categories of verb inflection are processed continuously. We present a single-system model that can adequately account for such graded effects.
引用
收藏
页码:1284 / 1304
页数:21
相关论文
共 70 条
  • [21] MASKED PRIMING WITH GRAPHEMICALLY RELATED FORMS - REPETITION OR PARTIAL ACTIVATION
    FORSTER, KI
    DAVIS, C
    SCHOKNECHT, C
    CARTER, R
    [J]. QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY SECTION A-HUMAN EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1987, 39 (02): : 211 - 251
  • [22] RELATIONS AMONG REGULAR AND IRREGULAR MORPHOLOGICALLY RELATED WORDS IN THE LEXICON AS REVEALED BY REPETITION PRIMING
    FOWLER, CA
    NAPPS, SE
    FELDMAN, L
    [J]. MEMORY & COGNITION, 1985, 13 (03) : 241 - 255
  • [23] Human brain potentials to violations in morphologically complex Italian words
    Gross, M
    Say, T
    Kleingers, M
    Clahsen, H
    Münte, TF
    [J]. NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1998, 241 (2-3) : 83 - 86
  • [24] A CORRECTION METHOD FOR DC DRIFT ARTIFACTS
    HENNIGHAUSEN, E
    HEIL, M
    ROSLER, F
    [J]. ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1993, 86 (03): : 199 - 204
  • [25] Exploring the temporal dynamics of visual word recognition in the masked repetition priming paradigm using event-related potentials
    Holcomb, Phillip J.
    Grainger, Jonathan
    [J]. BRAIN RESEARCH, 2007, 1180 : 39 - 58
  • [26] Huynh H., 1976, J Educ Stat, V1, P69, DOI [DOI 10.3102/10769986001001069, DOI 10.2307/1164736]
  • [27] Positron emission tomographic study of regular and irregular verb morphology in English
    Jaeger, JJ
    Lockwood, AH
    Kemmerer, DL
    VanValin, RD
    Murphy, BW
    Khalak, HG
    [J]. LANGUAGE, 1996, 72 (03) : 451 - 497
  • [28] Interpreting dissociations between regular and irregular past-tense morphology: Evidence from event-related potentials
    Justus, Timothy
    Larsen, Jary
    Davies, Paul De Mornay
    Swick, Diane
    [J]. COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2008, 8 (02) : 178 - 194
  • [29] Differences between noun and verb processing in a minimal phrase context:: a semantic priming study using event-related brain potentials
    Khader, P
    Scherag, A
    Streb, J
    Rösler, F
    [J]. COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 2003, 17 (02): : 293 - 313
  • [30] Graded Effects of Regularity in Language Revealed by N400 Indices of Morphological Priming
    Kielar, Aneta
    Joanisse, Marc F.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2010, 22 (07) : 1373 - 1398