Brain and grammar: revealing electrophysiological basic structures with competing statistical models

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Abstract

Acoustic, lexical and syntactic information is simultaneously processed in the brain. Therefore, distinguishing the electrophysiological activity pertaining to these components requires complex and indirect strategies. Capitalizing on previous works which factor out acoustic information, we could concentrate on the lexical and syntactic contribution to language processing by testing competing statistical models. We exploited EEG recordings and compared different surprisal models selectively involving lexical information, part of speech or syntactic structures in various combinations. EEG responses were recorded in 32 participants during listening to affirmative active declarative sentences and compared the activation corresponding to basic syntactic structures, such as noun phrases vs verb phrases. Lexical and syntactic processing activates different frequency bands, different time windows and different networks. Moreover, surprisal models based on part of speech inventory only do not explain well the electrophysiological data, while those including syntactic information do. Finally, we confirm previous measures obtained with intracortical recordings independently supporting the original hypothesis addressed here in a robust way.

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