Aydelott Jennifer, Dick Frederic, Mills Debra L
Center for Research in Language, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.
Psychophysiology. 2006 Sep;43(5):454-64. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2006.00448.x.
This study examined the neurophysiological effects of acoustic degradation on auditory semantic processing. Event-related potentials were recorded to target words presented in a sentence context. Targets were semantically congruent or incongruent with the context, which was acoustically intact or low-pass filtered. In unaltered contexts, N400 amplitude was significantly greater for incongruent than congruent words. Filtering significantly reduced this effect, even though participants were highly accurate in interpreting the degraded stimuli, as shown by an anomaly detection task. This reduction in the N400 effect appeared to be driven by decreased N400 amplitudes over posterior electrode sites for incongruent targets. These results demonstrate that acoustic degradation influences the neural response to words in context by reducing the availability of semantic information in on-line sentence comprehension.
本研究考察了声音退化对听觉语义加工的神经生理效应。记录了与句子语境中呈现的目标词相关的事件相关电位。目标词在语义上与语境一致或不一致,语境的声音要么完好无损,要么经过低通滤波。在未改变的语境中,与语境不一致的词的N400波幅显著大于与语境一致的词。尽管参与者在异常检测任务中对退化刺激的解释非常准确,但滤波显著降低了这种效应。N400效应的这种降低似乎是由与语境不一致的目标在后部电极部位的N400波幅降低所驱动的。这些结果表明,声音退化通过降低在线句子理解中语义信息的可用性,影响了大脑对语境中词汇的神经反应。