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Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

Monthly
160 pp. per issue
8 1/2 x 11, illustrated
Founded: 1989
ISSN 0898-929X
E-ISSN 1530-8898
2008 ISI Impact Factor: 4.867

Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

April 2007, Vol. 19, No. 4, Pages 605-616
Posted Online March 23, 2007.
(doi:10.1162/jocn.2007.19.4.605)
© 2007 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
On-line Integration of Semantic Information from Speech and Gesture: Insights from Event-related Brain Potentials

Aslı Özyürek1, 2, Roel M. Willems1, Sotaro Kita3, and Peter Hagoort1, 2

1F. C. Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Nijmegen

2Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

3University of Birmingham, UK

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Abstract

During language comprehension, listeners use the global semantic representation from previous sentence or discourse context to immediately integrate the meaning of each upcoming word into the unfolding message-level representation. Here we investigate whether communicative gestures that often spontaneously co-occur with speech are processed in a similar fashion and integrated to previous sentence context in the same way as lexical meaning. Event-related potentials were measured while subjects listened to spoken sentences with a critical verb (e.g., knock), which was accompanied by an iconic co-speech gesture (i.e., KNOCK). Verbal and/or gestural semantic content matched or mismatched the content of the preceding part of the sentence. Despite the difference in the modality and in the specificity of meaning conveyed by spoken words and gestures, the latency, amplitude, and topographical distribution of both word and gesture mismatches are found to be similar, indicating that the brain integrates both types of information simultaneously. This provides evidence for the claim that neural processing in language comprehension involves the simultaneous incorporation of information coming from a broader domain of cognition than only verbal semantics. The neural evidence for similar integration of information from speech and gesture emphasizes the tight interconnection between speech and co-speech gestures.

Cited by

Benjamin Straube, Antonia Green, Susanne Weis, Anjan Chatterjee, TiloKircher. (2009) Memory Effects of Speech and Gesture Binding: Cortical and Hippocampal Activation in Relation to Subsequent Memory Performance. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 21:4, 821-836
Online publication date: 1-Apr-2009.
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (316 KB) | PDF Plus (317 KB) 
Roel M. Willems, Aslı Özyürek, Peter Hagoort. (2008) Seeing and Hearing Meaning: ERP and fMRI Evidence of Word versus Picture Integration into a Sentence Context. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 20:7, 1235-1249
Online publication date: 1-Jul-2008.
Abstract | PDF (356 KB) | PDF Plus (342 KB) 
Henning Holle, Thomas C. Gunter. (2007) The Role of Iconic Gestures in Speech Disambiguation: ERP Evidence. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 19:7, 1175-1192
Online publication date: 1-Jul-2007.
Abstract | PDF (385 KB) | PDF Plus (418 KB) 
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