The P600 as a continuous index of integration effort

Christoph Aurnhammer, Francesca Delogu, Harm Brouwer, Matthew W. Crocker

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

    14 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The integration of word meaning into an unfolding utterance representation is a core operation of incremental language comprehension. There is considerable debate, however, as to which component of the ERP signal— the N400 or the P600— directly reflects integrative processes, with far reaching consequences for the temporal organization and architecture of the comprehension system. Multi- stream models maintaining the N400 as integration crucially rely on the pres-ence of a semantically attractive plausible alternative interpretation to account for the absence of an N400 effect in response to certain semantic anomalies, as reported in previous studies. The single- stream Retrieval– Integration account posits the P600 as an index of integration, further predicting that its amplitude varies continuously with integrative effort. Here, we directly test these competing hypotheses using a context manipulation design in which a semantically attrac-tive alternative is either available or not, and target word plausibility is varied across three levels. An initial self- paced reading study revealed graded reading times for plausibility, suggesting differential integration effort. A subsequent ERP study showed no N400 differences across conditions, and that P600 amplitude is graded for plausibility. These findings are inconsistent with the interpretation of the N400 as an index of integration, as no N400 effect emerged even in the absence of a semantically attractive alternative. By contrast, the link between plausibility, reading times, and P600 amplitude supports the view that the P600 is a continuous index of integration effort. More generally, our results support a single- stream architecture and eschew the need for multi- stream accounts.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere14302
    Pages (from-to)1-28
    Number of pages28
    JournalPsychophysiology
    Volume60
    Issue number9
    Early online date11 Apr 2023
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Sept 2023

    Keywords

    • ERPs
    • Eeg
    • Language comprehension
    • N400
    • P600
    • Psycholinguistics

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