2018
DOI: 10.1101/399733
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Frequency-specific brain dynamics related to prediction during language comprehension

Abstract: The brain's remarkable capacity to process spoken language virtually in real time requires fast and efficient information processing machinery.In this study, we investigated how frequency-specific brain dynamics relate to models of probabilistic language prediction during auditory narrative comprehension. We recorded MEG activity while participants were listening to auditory stories in Dutch. Using trigram statistical language models, we estimated for every word in a story its conditional probability of occurr… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The WM effects shown here furthermore fail to be accounted for by multiple strong measures of word predictability, which has repeatedly been shown in prior work to describe naturalistic human sentence processing responses across modalities, including behavioral (Demberg & Keller, 2008; Frank & Bod, 2011; Fossum & Levy, 2012; Smith & Levy, 2013; van Schijndel & Schuler, 2015; Aurnhammer & Frank, 2019; Shain, 2019), electrophysiological (Frank et al, 2015; Armeni et al, 2019), and fMRI (Brennan et al, 2016; Henderson et al, 2016; Lopopolo et al, 2017; Shain, Blank, et al, 2020; Willems et al, 2015). In its strong form, surprisal theory (Hale, 2001; Levy, 2008) equates sentence comprehension with allocating activation between (potentially infinite) possible interpretations of the unfolding sentence, in proportion to their probability given the currently observed string.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 66%
“…The WM effects shown here furthermore fail to be accounted for by multiple strong measures of word predictability, which has repeatedly been shown in prior work to describe naturalistic human sentence processing responses across modalities, including behavioral (Demberg & Keller, 2008; Frank & Bod, 2011; Fossum & Levy, 2012; Smith & Levy, 2013; van Schijndel & Schuler, 2015; Aurnhammer & Frank, 2019; Shain, 2019), electrophysiological (Frank et al, 2015; Armeni et al, 2019), and fMRI (Brennan et al, 2016; Henderson et al, 2016; Lopopolo et al, 2017; Shain, Blank, et al, 2020; Willems et al, 2015). In its strong form, surprisal theory (Hale, 2001; Levy, 2008) equates sentence comprehension with allocating activation between (potentially infinite) possible interpretations of the unfolding sentence, in proportion to their probability given the currently observed string.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 66%
“…In line with previous literature (Armeni, Willems, van den Bosch, & Schoffelen, 2019; Hultén, Schoffelen, Uddén, Lam, & Hagoort, 2019; Schuster et al, 2020), the word-by-word association between the MEG signals and the increasingly constrained context (i.e. index), and metrics quantifying (the results of) prediction, presented itself with different spatiotemporal dynamics.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Even something as simple as adjective-noun syntax (e.g., "red boat") is constructed predictively (Berwick & Stabler 2019). Finding evidence that some feature of cognition is concerned with surprise avoidance at once suggests that such a feature will comply with active inference (Da Costa et al 2020; see also Armeni et al 2018, Di Liberto et al 2018, Keshev & Meltzer-Asscher 2021, Wang et al 2018 and much other work for evidence for predictive processing in language, supporting the idea that prediction is a "canonical computation" implemented in domain-specific circuits; Keller & Mrsic-Flogel 2018).…”
Section: Ideal and The Real: Aligning Grammatical Knowledge With Performancementioning
confidence: 83%