New paper on oscillatory correlates of lexical processing

paper
Author

Jonathan Brennan

Published

June 23, 2014

Out now in Brain and Language, with colleagues from the CHOP MEG center, we use a semantic priming paradigm to test for changes in event-related synchronization and de-synchronization that are tied to lexical access.

Brennan, J., Lignos, Constantine, Embick, D. & Roberts, T. P. L. (2014). Spectro-temporal correlates of lexical access during auditory lexical decision. Brain & Language. 133:39–46. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2014.03.006

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Abstract

Lexical access during speech comprehension comprises numerous computations, including activation, competition, and selection. The spatio-temporal profile of these processes involves neural activity in peri-auditory cortices at least as early as 200ms after stimulation. Their oscillatory dynamics are less well understood, although reports link alpha band de-synchronization with lexical processing. We used magnetoencephalography to examine whether alpha-related oscillations reflect lexical activation. In an auditory semantic priming protocol, monosyllabic nouns were presented while participants performed a lexical decision task. Spatially-localizing beamforming was used to examine spectro-temporal effects in auditory cortex time-locked to target word onset. Alpha and beta de-synchronization (10-20Hz) was attenuated for words following a related prime compared to an unrelated prime beginning 270ms after stimulus onset. This timing is consistent with how information about lexical identity unfolds incrementally, quantified in information-theoretic terms. These findings suggest that alpha de-synchronization during auditory word processing is associated with early stages of lexical access