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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Cortical tracking of hierarchical linguistic structures in connected speech

TLDR
It is found that, during listening to connected speech, cortical activity of different timescales concurrently tracked the time course of abstract linguistic structures at different hierarchical levels, such as words, phrases and sentences.
Abstract
The most critical attribute of human language is its unbounded combinatorial nature: smaller elements can be combined into larger structures on the basis of a grammatical system, resulting in a hierarchy of linguistic units, such as words, phrases and sentences. Mentally parsing and representing such structures, however, poses challenges for speech comprehension. In speech, hierarchical linguistic structures do not have boundaries that are clearly defined by acoustic cues and must therefore be internally and incrementally constructed during comprehension. We found that, during listening to connected speech, cortical activity of different timescales concurrently tracked the time course of abstract linguistic structures at different hierarchical levels, such as words, phrases and sentences. Notably, the neural tracking of hierarchical linguistic structures was dissociated from the encoding of acoustic cues and from the predictability of incoming words. Our results indicate that a hierarchy of neural processing timescales underlies grammar-based internal construction of hierarchical linguistic structure.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Large-Scale Gradients in Human Cortical Organization

TL;DR: A dominant gradient in cortical features that spans between sensorimotor and transmodal areas is described and it is proposed that this gradient constitutes a core organizing axis of the human cerebral cortex, and an intrinsic coordinate system is described on its basis.
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Magnetoencephalography for brain electrophysiology and imaging

TL;DR: A review of magnetoencephalography (MEG) among the techniques available to explore and resolve brain function and dysfunction can be found in this paper, where the authors identify and discuss current practical challenges, in particular in signal extraction and interpretation.
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The Now-or-Never bottleneck: A fundamental constraint on language.

TL;DR: It is argued that, to deal with this “Now-or-Never” bottleneck, the brain must compress and recode linguistic input as rapidly as possible, which implies that language acquisition is learning to process, rather than inducing, a grammar.
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Psychology, Science, and Knowledge Construction: Broadening Perspectives from the Replication Crisis.

TL;DR: It is recommended that researchers adopt open science conventions of preregi‐stration and full disclosure and that replication efforts be based on multiple studies rather than on a single replication attempt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anticipated moments: temporal structure in attention.

TL;DR: This Review introduces the burgeoning field of temporal attention and illustrates how the brain makes use of various forms of temporal regularities in the environment to guide adaptive behaviour and influence neural processing.
References
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Book

An introduction to the bootstrap

TL;DR: This article presents bootstrap methods for estimation, using simple arguments, with Minitab macros for implementing these methods, as well as some examples of how these methods could be used for estimation purposes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventory

TL;DR: An inventory of 20 items with a set of instructions and response- and computational-conventions is proposed and the results obtained from a young adult population numbering some 1100 individuals are reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Learning by 8-Month-Old Infants

TL;DR: The present study shows that a fundamental task of language acquisition, segmentation of words from fluent speech, can be accomplished by 8-month-old infants based solely on the statistical relationships between neighboring speech sounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cortical organization of speech processing

TL;DR: A dual-stream model of speech processing is outlined that assumes that the ventral stream is largely bilaterally organized — although there are important computational differences between the left- and right-hemisphere systems — and that the dorsal stream is strongly left- Hemisphere dominant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual feature integration and the temporal correlation hypothesis

TL;DR: The mammalian visual system is endowed with a nearly infinite capacity for the recognition of patterns and objects, but to have acquired this capability the visual system must have solved what is a fundamentally combinatorial prob­ lem.
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