Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309-0345, USA.
Sci Adv. 2024 Oct 25;10(43):eadr9951. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adr9951. Epub 2024 Oct 23.
Human brains grasp the gists of visual scenes from a single glance, but to what extent is this possible for language? While we typically think of language in terms of sequential speech, our everyday experience involves numerous rapidly flashing written notifications, which we understand instantly. What do our brains detect in the first few hundred milliseconds after seeing such a stimulus? We flashed short sentences during magnetoencephalography measurement, revealing sentence-sensitive neural activity in left temporal cortex within 130 milliseconds. These signals emerged for subject-verb-object sentences regardless of grammatical or semantic well-formedness, suggesting that at-a-glance language comprehension begins by detecting basic phrase structure, independent of meaning or other grammatical details. Our findings unveil one aspect of how our brains process information rapidly in today's visually saturated world.
人类大脑只需看一眼就能理解视觉场景的大意,但语言在多大程度上可以做到这一点呢?虽然我们通常认为语言是按顺序进行的,但我们的日常经验包括许多快速闪现的书面通知,我们可以立即理解这些通知。在看到这样的刺激后,我们的大脑在最初的几百毫秒内会检测到什么?我们在磁共振脑磁图测量期间闪现了简短的句子,在 130 毫秒内揭示了左颞叶皮层中的句子敏感神经活动。这些信号出现在主语-动词-宾语句子中,无论语法或语义是否完整,这表明在一眼就能理解语言的过程中,大脑首先通过检测基本的短语结构来进行,而不考虑意义或其他语法细节。我们的发现揭示了我们的大脑在当今视觉饱和的世界中快速处理信息的一个方面。