Tineke Snijders

Presentations

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  • Dimitrova, D. V., Snijders, T. M., & Hagoort, P. (2014). Neurobiological attention mechanisms of syntactic and prosodic focusing in spoken language. Poster presented at the Sixth Annual Meeting of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language (SNL 2014), Amsterdam.

    Abstract

    IIn spoken utterances important or new information is
    often linguistically marked, for instance by prosody
    or syntax. Such highlighting prevents listeners from
    skipping over relevant information. Linguistic cues like
    pitch accents lead to a more elaborate processing of
    important information (Wang et al., 2011). In a recent
    fMRI study, Kristensen et al. (2013) have shown that the
    neurobiological signature of pitch accents is linked to the
    domain-general attention network. This network includes
    the superior and inferior parietal cortex. It is an open
    question whether non-prosodic markers of focus (i.e. the
    important/new information) function similarly on the
    neurobiological level, that is by recruiting the domaingeneral
    attention network. This study tried to address
    this question by testing a syntactic marker of focus. The
    present fMRI study investigates the processing of it-clefts,
    which highlight important information syntactically,
    and compares it to the processing of pitch accents, which
    highlight information prosodically. We further test if
    both linguistic focusing devices recruit domain-general
    attention mechanisms. In the language task, participants
    listened to short stories like “In the beginning of February
    the final exam period was approaching. The student did
    not read the lecture notes”. In the last sentence of each
    story, the new information was focused either by a pitch
    accent as in “He borrowed the BOOK from the library”
    or by an it-cleft like “It was the book that he borrowed
    from the library”. Pitch accents were pronounced without
    exaggerated acoustic emphasis. Two control conditions
    were included: (i) sentences with fronted focus like “The
    book he borrowed from the library”, to account for word
    order differences between sentences with clefts and
    accents, and (ii) sentences without prosodic emphasis
    like ”He borrowed the book from the library”. In the
    attentional localizer task (adopted from Kristensen et al., 2013), participants listened to tones in a dichotic
    listening paradigm. A cue tone was presented in one ear
    and participants responded to a target tone presented
    either in the same or the other ear. In line with Kristensen
    et al. (2013), we found that in the localizer task cue
    tones activated the right inferior parietal cortex and the
    precuneus, and we found additional activations in the
    right superior temporal gyrus. In the language task,
    sentences with it- clefts elicited larger activations in the
    left and right superior temporal gyrus as compared to
    control sentences with fronted focus. For the contrast
    between sentences with pitch accent vs. without pitch
    accent we observed activation in the inferior parietal
    lobe, this activation did however not survive multiple
    comparisons correction. In sum, our findings show that
    syntactic focusing constructions like it-clefts recruit
    the superior temporal gyri, similarly to cue tones in
    the localizer task. Highlighting focus by pitch accent
    activated the parietal cortex in areas overlapping with
    those reported by Kristensen et al. and with those we
    found for cue tones in the localizer task. Our study
    provides novel evidence that prosodic and syntactic
    focusing devices likely have a distinct neurobiological
    signature in spoken language comprehension.
  • Fonteijn, H. M., Acheson, D. J., Petersson, K. M., Segaert, K., Snijders, T. M., Udden, J., Willems, R. M., & Hagoort, P. (2014). Overlap and segregation in activation for syntax and semantics: a meta-analysis of 13 fMRI studies. Poster presented at the Sixth Annual Meeting of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language (SNL 2014), Amsterdam.

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