Brain and grammar: revealing electrophysiological basic structures with competing statistical models

Author:

Cometa Andrea123ORCID,Battaglini Chiara4ORCID,Artoni Fiorenzo5,Greco Matteo3,Frank Robert6,Repetto Claudia7,Bottoni Franco8,Cappa Stefano F39,Micera Silvestro210,Ricciardi Emiliano1,Moro Andrea3

Affiliation:

1. IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca MoMiLab, , Piazza S.Francesco, 19, Lucca 55100 , Italy

2. Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna The BioRobotics Institute and Department of Excellence in Robotics and AI, , Viale Rinaldo Piaggio 34, Pontedera 56025 , Italy

3. University School for Advanced Studies IUSS Cognitive Neuroscience (ICoN) Center, , Piazza Vittoria 15, Pavia 27100 , Italy

4. University School for Advanced Studies IUSS Pavia Neurolinguistics and Experimental Pragmatics (NEP) Lab, , Piazza della Vittoria 15, Pavia 27100 , Italy

5. University of Geneva Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, , 1, rue Michel-Servet, Genéve 1211 , Switzerland

6. Yale University Department of Linguistics, , 370 Temple St, New Haven, CT 06511 , United States

7. Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore Department of Psychology, , Largo A. Gemelli 1, Milan 20123 , Italy

8. Istituto Clinico Humanitas, IRCCS , Via Alessandro Manzoni 56, Rozzano 20089 , Italy

9. Dementia Research Center, IRCCS Mondino Foundation National Institute of Neurology , Via Mondino 2, Pavia 27100 , Italy

10. Center for Neuroprosthetics and School of Engineering, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne Bertarelli Foundation Chair in Translational NeuroEngineering, , Campus Biotech, Chemin des Mines 9, Geneva, GE CH 1202 , Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Acoustic, lexical, and syntactic information are simultaneously processed in the brain requiring complex strategies to distinguish their electrophysiological activity. Capitalizing on previous works that factor out acoustic information, we could concentrate on the lexical and syntactic contribution to language processing by testing competing statistical models. We exploited electroencephalographic recordings and compared different surprisal models selectively involving lexical information, part of speech, or syntactic structures in various combinations. Electroencephalographic responses were recorded in 32 participants during listening to affirmative active declarative sentences. We compared the activation corresponding to basic syntactic structures, such as noun phrases vs. verb phrases. Lexical and syntactic processing activates different frequency bands, partially different time windows, and different networks. Moreover, surprisal models based on part of speech inventory only do not explain well the electrophysiological data, while those including syntactic information do. By disentangling acoustic, lexical, and syntactic information, we demonstrated differential brain sensitivity to syntactic information. These results confirm and extend previous measures obtained with intracranial recordings, supporting our hypothesis that syntactic structures are crucial in neural language processing. This study provides a detailed understanding of how the brain processes syntactic information, highlighting the importance of syntactic surprisal in shaping neural responses during language comprehension.

Funder

Italian Ministry for Universities and Research

Bertarelli Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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