个体说话者语言理解的概率适应:来自神经振荡的证据。

IF 3.1
Hanlin Wu, Xiaohui Rao, Zhenguang G Cai
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引用次数: 0

摘要

听者根据他们对说话者的心理表征来适应语言理解,但这些表征是如何更新的尚不清楚。我们调查了听者是否会根据说话者做出刻板印象不一致陈述的频率来概率地适应理解。在两个脑电图实验中,参与者听到说话者的刻板印象一致或不一致的陈述,不一致的基准率被操纵。在实验1中,刻板印象不一致陈述在低基础率条件下降低了高β (21-30 Hz)和θ (4-6 Hz)振荡功率,而在高基础率条件下增加了高β (21-30 Hz)振荡功率。theta效应随听者开放特质的不同而变化:较不开放的参与者倾向于表现出对刻板印象不一致的theta增加,而较开放的参与者则倾向于表现出theta减少。在实验2中,我们通过使用非目标说话人来操纵目标说话人的不一致基率,并发现只有高β效应持续存在。我们的研究结果揭示了两种潜在的机制:一种是讲话者-一般机制(由高β振荡表示),它调整了人们对违反社会刻板印象的听力陈述的总体期望;另一种是讲话者-特定机制(由θ振荡表示),它更新了一个更详细的关于个别讲话者的心理模型。这些发现为语言的神经认知加工如何受到社会认知的影响提供了证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Probabilistic adaptation of language comprehension for individual speakers: Evidence from neural oscillations.

Listeners adapt language comprehension based on their mental representations of speakers, but how these representations are updated remains unclear. We investigated whether listeners probabilistically adapt comprehension based on the frequency of speakers making stereotype-incongruent statements. In two EEG experiments, participants heard speakers make stereotype-congruent or incongruent statements, with incongruency base rate manipulated. In Experiment 1, stereotype-incongruent statements decreased high-beta (21-30 Hz) and theta (4-6 Hz) oscillatory power in the low base rate condition but increased it in the high base rate condition. The theta effect varied with listeners' openness trait: less open-minded participants tended to show theta increases to stereotype incongruencies, while more open-minded participants tended to show theta decreases. In Experiment 2, we dissociated incongruency base rate from the target speaker by manipulating it using a non-target speaker and found that only the high-beta effect persisted. Our findings reveal two potential mechanisms: a speaker-general mechanism (indicated by high-beta oscillations) that adjusts overall expectations about hearing statements that violate social stereotypes, and a speaker-specific mechanism (indicated by theta oscillations) that updates a more detailed mental model specifically about an individual speaker. These findings provide evidence for how the neurocognitive processing of language is shaped by social cognition.

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