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  Neural harmonics reflect grammaticality

Tavano, A., Blohm, S., Knoop, C., Muralikrishnan, R., Scharinger, M., Wagner, V., et al. (2020). Neural harmonics reflect grammaticality. bioRxiv - The Preprint Server for Biology, Preprint. Retrieved from http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/04/08/2020.04.08.031575.abstract.

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 Creators:
Tavano, Alessandro1, Author           
Blohm, Stefan2, Author           
Knoop, Christine2, Author
Muralikrishnan, R1, Author
Scharinger, Mathias2, 3, Author           
Wagner, Valentin2, Author           
Thiele, Dominik1, Author
Ghitza, Oded4, Author
Ding, Nai5, Author
Menninghaus, Winfried2, Author
Poeppel, David1, 6, Author           
Affiliations:
1Department of Neuroscience, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Max Planck Society, Grüneburgweg 14, 60322 Frankfurt am Main, DE, ou_2421697              
2Department of Language and Literature, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Max Planck Society, ou_2421695              
3University of Marburg, ou_persistent22              
4Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, ou_persistent22              
5College of Biomedical Engineering and Instrument Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, ou_persistent22              
6Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, ou_persistent22              

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 Abstract: Can neural activity reveal syntactic structure building processes and their violations? To verify this, we recorded electroencephalographic and behavioral data as participants discriminated concatenated isochronous sentence chains containing only grammatical sentences (regular trials) from those containing ungrammatical sentences (irregular trials). We found that the repetition of abstract syntactic categories generates a harmonic structure of their period independently of stimulus rate, thereby separating endogenous from exogenous neural rhythms. Behavioral analyses confirmed this dissociation. Internal neural harmonics extracted from regular trials predicted participants’ grammatical sensitivity better than harmonics extracted from irregular trials, suggesting a direct reflection of grammatical sensitivity. Instead, entraining to external stimulus rate scaled with task sensitivity only when extracted from irregular trials, reflecting attention-capture processing. Neural harmonics to repeated syntactic categories constitute the first behaviorally relevant, purely internal index of syntactic competence.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2020-04-08
 Publication Status: Published online
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Title: bioRxiv - The Preprint Server for Biology
Source Genre: Journal
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