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      When syntax meets semantics.

      Psychophysiology
      Adult, Electroencephalography, Electrooculography, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Language, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Semantics

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          Abstract

          Three experiments concerning the processing of syntactic and semantic violations were conducted. Event-related potentials (ERPs) showed that semantic violations elicited an N400 response, whereas syntactic violations elicited two early negativities (150 and 350 ms) and a P600 response. No interaction between the semantic and early syntactic ERP effects was found. Sentence complexity and violation probability (25% vs. 75%) affected only the P600 and not the early negativities. The probability effect was taken as evidence that the P600 resembles the P3b. The temporal order of word processing in a sentence as suggested by the data was such that a more automatic syntactic analysis was performed (earlier syntactic-related negativities) in parallel with a semantic analysis (N400), after which a syntactic reanalysis was performed (P600). A reanalysis interpretation of the P600 could explain why the extent of the reanalysis differed with syntactic complexity and probability of ungrammaticality.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9401421
          10.1111/j.1469-8986.1997.tb02142.x

          Chemistry
          Adult,Electroencephalography,Electrooculography,Evoked Potentials,Female,Humans,Language,Male,Multivariate Analysis,Semantics

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