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Selectional restriction and chord sequence incongruities: Further evidence from event-related potentials in processing language and musicopen accessSelectional restriction and chord sequence incongruities: Further evidence from event-related potentials in processing language and music

Other Titles
Selectional restriction and chord sequence incongruities: Further evidence from event-related potentials in processing language and music
Authors
조의연박명관정원일남정우
Issue Date
Aug-2016
Publisher
담화·인지언어학회
Keywords
language; music; selectional restriction; chord sequence; event related potentials (ERP); N400; N600; anterior P600; domain specificity/generality
Citation
담화와 인지, v.23, no.3, pp 73 - 102
Pages
30
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
담화와 인지
Volume
23
Number
3
Start Page
73
End Page
102
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/16399
DOI
10.15718/discog.2016.23.3.73
ISSN
1226-5691
Abstract
Cho, Euiyon et al. 2016. Selectional restriction and chord sequence incongruities: Further evidence from event-related potentials in processing language and music. Discourse and Cogniyion xxxxxxxxxx. In order to test the domain-specificity/generality of language and music processing, this study used the event-related potential (ERP) paradigm to compare neural responses elicited from violations in language and music. Employing selectional restriction (SR) for language and chord sequence (CS) for music, sentences and musical pieces were constructed in which the sentence/musical piece-final verb or chord was either congruous or incongruous with the preceding structural context. A within-participants design using 20 college students revealed that linguistic and musical structural violations elicited different ERP components: N400 followed by N600 for SR, and anterior P600 for CS. With the neural correlates of their inherently different properties factored out, the results in our study suggest that a brain response elicited by a music-syntactic violation of CS was generated in brain areas overlapping those involved in the processing of semantic-syntactic SR, previously considered to be domain-specific for language processing.(145)
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