High-level Speech Processing During Mind-Wandering: Evidence from Neural Alignment with Language Models
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Speech processing involves a subjective sense of engagement with content. This experience occurs alongside continuous prediction of upcoming contents, raising questions regarding the potential relationship between these phenomena. Is the activation of predictive mechanisms sufficient for subjective experience, or can it proceed when the mind wanders away? Participants (N = 25) listened to audiobook content (>12,000 words) while providing self-reports of mind-wandering. Such reports were associated with spectral changes in the EEG signal and decreased early response to word onset, in line with current accounts of mind-wandering. In contrast, markers of word-level contextual surprise (indexed by the contextual surprise of Language Models) remained intact during mind-wandering, alongside significant encoding of semantic contents. Last, we measured the neural encoding of predictive context, measured by the correlation between EEG and the vectorial embeddings that Language Models use to predict each word given prior context. This encoding also remained strong during mind-wandering, albeit weaker compared to attentive periods. Our findings show that the brain predicts and monitors relevant inputs even when we disengage from the external environment. It suggests that the shared computational mechanisms between humans and Language Models are insufficient for experiencing the meaning of speech contents, with implications for theoretical accounts of mind-wandering and predictive processing accounts of consciousness.