186 results on '"Niels O. Schiller"'
Search Results
2. Mapping caudal inferior parietal cortex supports the hypothesis about a modulating cortical area
- Author
-
Fatemeh Tabassi Mofrad and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
Caudal inferior parietal cortex ,Functional connectivity ,Modulating cortical area ,Cognitive control ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The cytoarchitectonically tripartite organization of the inferior parietal cortex (IPC) into the rostral, the middle and the caudal clusters has been generally ignored when associating different functions to this part of the cortex, resulting in inconsistencies about how IPC is understood. In this study, we investigated the patterns of functional connectivity of the caudal IPC in a task requiring cognitive control, using multiband EPI. This part of the cortex demonstrated functional connectivity patterns dissimilar to a cognitive control area and at the same time the caudal IPC showed negative functional associations with both task-related brain areas and the precuneus cortex, which is active during resting state. We found evidence suggesting that the traditional categorization of different brain areas into either task-related or resting state-related networks cannot accommodate the functions of the caudal IPC. This underlies the hypothesis about a new brain functional category as a modulating cortical area proposing that its involvement in task performance, in a modulating manner, is marked by deactivation in the patterns of functional associations with parts of the brain that are recognized to be involved in doing a task, proportionate to task difficulty; however, its patterns of functional connectivity in some other respects do not correspond to the resting state-related parts of the cortex.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Gender Congruency Effects in Spanish: Behavioral Evidence from Noun Phrase Production
- Author
-
Ruixue Wu and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
language production ,lexico-syntactic features ,gender congruency effect ,PWI ,Spanish ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Grammatical gender as a lexico-syntactic feature has been well explored, and the gender congruency effect has been observed in many languages (e.g., Dutch, German, Croatian, Czech, etc.). Yet, so far, this effect has not been found in Romance languages such as Italian, French, and Spanish. It has been argued that the absence of the effect in Romance languages is due the fact that the gender-marking definite article is not exclusively dependent on the grammatical gender of the head noun, but also on its onset phonology (e.g., lo zucchero is ‘the sugar’ in Italian, not il zucchero, il being the default masculine determiner in Italian). For Spanish, this argument has also been made because feminine words starting with a stressed /a/ take the masculine article (e.g., el água is ‘the water’, not la água). However, the number of words belonging to that set is rather small in Spanish, and it may be questionable whether or not this feature can be taken as an argument for the absence of a gender congruency effect in Spanish. In this study, we investigated the gender congruency effect in native Spanish noun phrase production. We measured 30 native Spanish speakers’ naming latencies in four conditions via the picture–word interference paradigm by manipulating gender congruency (i.e., gender-congruent vs. gender-incongruent) and semantic relatedness (i.e., semantically related vs. semantically unrelated). The results revealed significantly longer naming latencies in gender-incongruent and semantically related conditions compared to gender-congruent and semantically unrelated conditions. This result suggests that grammatical gender as a lexico-syntactic feature in Spanish is used to competitively select determiners in native Spanish speakers’ noun phrases. Our findings provide an important behavioral piece of evidence for the gender congruency effect in Romance languages.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Cross-Dialectal Novel Word Learning and Borrowing
- Author
-
Junru Wu, Wei Zheng, Mengru Han, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
dialect ,lexical borrowing ,word learning ,lexical processing ,bilingualism ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The objective of this paper was to study the cognitive processes underlying cross-dialectal novel word borrowing and loanword establishment in a Standard-Chinese-to-Shanghainese (SC-SH) auditory lexical learning and borrowing experiment. To investigate these underlying cognitive processes, SC-SH bi-dialectals were compared with SC monolectals as well as bi-dialectals of SC and other Chinese dialects (OD) to investigate the influence of short-term and long-term linguistic experience. Both comprehension and production borrowings were tested. This study found that early and proficient bi-dialectism, even if it is not directly related to the recipient dialect of lexical borrowing, has a protective effect on the ability of cross-dialectal lexical borrowing in early adulthood. Bi-dialectals tend to add separate lexical representations for incidentally encountered dialectal variants, while monolectals tend to assimilate dialectal variants to standard forms. Bi-dialectals, but not monolectals, use etymologically related morphemes between the source and recipient dialects to create nonce-borrowing compounds. Dialectal variability facilitates lexical borrowing via enriching instead of increasing the short-term lexical experience of learners. The long-term bi-dialectal experience of individuals, as well as their short-term exposure to each specific loanword, may collectively shape the route of lexical evolution of co-evolving linguistic varieties.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. (Not so) Great Expectations: Listening to Foreign-Accented Speech Reduces the Brain’s Anticipatory Processes
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Bastien P.-A. Boutonnet, Marianne L. S. De Heer Kloots, Marieke Meelen, Bobby Ruijgrok, and Lisa L.-S. Cheng
- Subjects
prediction ,speech perception ,sentence comprehension ,foreign-accented speech ,Dutch ,native vs. non-native speech processing ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
This study examines the effect of foreign-accented speech on the predictive ability of our brain. Listeners actively anticipate upcoming linguistic information in the speech signal so as to facilitate and reduce processing load. However, it is unclear whether or not listeners also do this when they are exposed to speech from non-native speakers. In the present study, we exposed native Dutch listeners to sentences produced by native and non-native speakers while measuring their brain activity using electroencephalography. We found that listeners’ brain activity differed depending on whether they listened to native or non-native speech. However, participants’ overall performance as measured by word recall rate was unaffected. We discussed the results in relation to previous findings as well as the automaticity of anticipation.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Quality of Javanese and Sundanese Vowels
- Author
-
Arum Perwitasari, Marian Klamer, Jurriaan Witterman, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
acoustic analysis ,duration ,formants ,vowel quality ,vowel quantity ,Languages and literature of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania ,PL1-8844 - Abstract
The vowel quality of Javanese and Sundanese is influenced by phonation types. The acoustic measurements of the differences in phonation between all Javanese and Sundanese vowels have not been instrumentally examined. Evidence suggests that F1 lowering is a common characteristic of vowel quality correlated with the phonation after the slack-voiced stop /b/. The current study seeks to extend the possible variation in the realization of phonation by Javanese vowels /i/, /e/, /a/, /ə/, /u/ and /o/ and Sundanese vowels /i/, /a/, /ə/, /ɨ/, /e/, /u/ and /o/ after the slack-voiced /b/ and the voiceless glottal /h/. In this experiment, the authors recorded the vowel production of four Javanese and four Sundanese native speakers and measured the formant frequencies (F1 and F2). The results confirm that Javanese and Sundanese vowels are constantly pronounced with lower F1 after /b/. In addition, the Javanese speakers articulate the vowel /ɘ/ rather than schwa /ə/ in the slack-voiced /b/ and voiceless glottal stop /h/, in which the vowel occupies the high-mid central position of the vowel space area. The Sundanese speakers in this study surprisingly produce the expected high vowel /ɨ/ in the high near-front of the vowel space; it is suggested to transcribe this as /ʏ/. The results of the formant frequencies of the Javanese and Sundanese vowels are consistent with the study by Hayward (1993) indicating F1 lowering after the slack-voiced /b/.
- Published
- 2017
7. A Review on Grammatical Gender Agreement in Speech Production
- Author
-
Man Wang and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
grammatical gender ,agreement ,lexico-syntactic feature ,speech production ,ERP ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Grammatical gender agreement has been well addressed in language comprehension but less so in language production. The present article discusses the arguments derived from the most prominent language production models on the representation and processing of the grammatical gender of nouns in language production and then reviews recent empirical studies that provide some answers to these arguments.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Editorial: (Pushing) the Limits of Neuroplasticity Induced by Adult Language Acquisition
- Author
-
Jurriaan Witteman, Yiya Chen, Leticia Pablos-Robles, Maria Carmen Parafita Couto, Patrick C. M. Wong, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
brain ,cognition ,language ,bilingualism ,neuroplasicity ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Connectivity of the hippocampus and Broca's area during acquisition of a novel grammar.
- Author
-
Olga Kepinska, Mischa de Rover, Johanneke Caspers, and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The role of F0 and duration in the identification of wh-in-situ questions in Persian.
- Author
-
Zohreh Shiamizadeh, Johanneke Caspers, and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Predicting tonal realizations in one Chinese dialect from another.
- Author
-
Junru Wu, Yiya Chen, Vincent J. van Heuven, and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Distinct connectivity patterns in clusters of inferior parietal cortex
- Author
-
Fatemeh Tabassi Mofrad and Niels O. Schiller
- Abstract
The inferior parietal cortex (IPC) is a complex brain region with the rostral, the middle and the caudal clusters, and functionally connected to several other cortical areas. Various cognitive functions are suggested to be governed by the IPC, however, due to ignoring the tripartite structure of this part of the brain, inconsistencies abound. Here, we compare functional connectivity patterns of the clusters of the IPC and highlight that only the rostral cluster of the IPC is involved in executive functions and not the whole IPC. We also elucidate the unique connectivity profiles of the middle and the caudal IPC which are not accommodated by traditional classification of brain areas as either task-based or resting-state related. These two clusters of the IPC demonstrate negative functional associations with brain areas involved in general cognitive functions, executive functions, in addition to the precuneus cortex, proportional to cognitive demand, in a modulating manner.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. When left is right
- Author
-
Sarah Von Grebmer Zu Wolfsthurn, Anna Gupta, Leticia Pablos, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Language and Linguistics ,Education - Abstract
Both inhibitory control and typological similarity between two languages feature frequently in current research on multilingual cognitive processing mechanisms. Yet, the modulatory effect of speaking two typologically highly similar languages on inhibitory control performance remains largely unexplored. However, this is a critical issue because it speaks directly to the organisation of the multilingual's cognitive architecture. In this study, we examined the influence of typological similarity on inhibitory control performance via a spatial Stroop paradigm in native Italian and native Dutch late learners of Spanish. Contrary to our hypothesis, we did not find evidence for a differential Stroop effect size for the typologically similar group (Italian–Spanish) compared to the typologically dissimilar group (Dutch–Spanish). Our results therefore suggest a limited influence of typological similarity on inhibitory control performance. The study has critical implications for characterising inhibitory control processes in multilinguals.
- Published
- 2023
14. Phonological Encoding in Reading Aloud Persian: ERP Evidence for the Phonological Basis of the Masked Onset Priming Effect.
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Narges Vahid-Gharavi, and Kalinka Timmer
- Published
- 2011
15. Acoustic correlates of Persian in-situ-wh-questions.
- Author
-
Zohreh Shiamizadeh, Johanneke Caspers, and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2015
16. Vowel duration in English as a second language among Javanese learners.
- Author
-
Arum Perwitasari, Marian Klamer, Jurriaan Witteman, and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2015
17. The effect of word frequency and neighbourhood density on tone merge.
- Author
-
Yifei Bi, Yiya Chen, and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2015
18. Discrimination of emotional and linguistic prosody with cochlear implant simulations.
- Author
-
Daan J. van de Velde, Arian Khoshchin, Linda ter Beek, Niels O. Schiller, Johan H. M. Frijns, and Jeroen J. Briaire
- Published
- 2015
19. Phonological encoding in speech production.
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2006
20. Connectivity profile of middle inferior parietal cortex confirms modulating cortical areas as a new brain category
- Author
-
Fatemeh Tabassi Mofrad and Niels O. Schiller
- Abstract
According to the correlated transmitter-receptor based organization of the inferior parietal cortex (IPC), this brain area is parcellated into the rostral, the middle and the caudal clusters. However, in associating different cognitive functions to the IPC, previous studies considered this part of the cortex as a whole and thus inconsistent results have been reported about the functions of the IPC. Using multiband EPI, in this study, we investigated the functional connectivity profile of the middle IPC while participants performed a task requiring cognitive control. The middle IPC demonstrated functional associations which do not have similarity to a contributing part in the frontoparietal network, in processing cognitive control. At the same time, this part of the cortex showed negative functional connectivity with both the precuneus cortex, which is active during resting state, and brain areas which are involved in general cognitive functions. That is, the functions of the middle IPC are not accommodated by the traditional categorization of different brain areas into either task-related or resting state-related networks. This advanced our hypothesis about modulating cortical areas as a new brain functional category with modulating functions. Such brain areas are characterized by deactivation in the patterns of functional connectivity with parts of the cortex that are involved in task performance, proportionate to task difficulty; however, their functional associations are inconsistent with resting state-related cortical areas.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Phonetics and Phonology in Language Comprehension and Production
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Antje S. Meyer, Niels O. Schiller, Antje S. Meyer
- Published
- 2011
22. The Nature of Affective Priming in Music and Speech.
- Author
-
Katharina Sophia Goerlich, Jurriaan Witteman, Niels O. Schiller, Vincent J. van Heuven, André Aleman, and Sander Martens
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Independent Distractor Frequency and Age-of-Acquisition Effects in Picture-Word Interference: fMRI Evidence for Post-lexical and Lexical Accounts according to Distractor Type.
- Author
-
Greig I. de Zubicaray, Michele Miozzo, Kori Johnson, Niels O. Schiller, and Katie McMahon
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The functional neuroanatomy of morphology in language production.
- Author
-
Dirk Koester and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Detection of speech errors in the speech of others: An ERP study.
- Author
-
Lesya Y. Ganushchak and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Event-related brain potentials during the monitoring of speech errors.
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Iemke Horemans, Lesya Y. Ganushchak, and Dirk Koester
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Connectivity Profile of Middle Inferior Parietal Cortex Confirms Modulating Cortical Areas Hypothesis
- Author
-
Fatemeh (Simin) Tabassi Mofrad, Fatemeh Tabassi Mofrad, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Does your native language matter? Neural correlates of typological similarity in non-native production
- Author
-
Sarah Von Grebmer Zu Wolfsthurn, Leticia Pablos, Niels O Schiller
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Motivation and semantic context affect brain error-monitoring activity: An event-related brain potentials study.
- Author
-
Lesya Y. Ganushchak and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Morphological priming in overt language production: Electrophysiological evidence from Dutch.
- Author
-
Dirk Koester and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Brain Error-monitoring Activity is Affected by Semantic Relatedness: An Event-related Brain Potentials Study.
- Author
-
Lesya Y. Ganushchak and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Does syllable frequency affect production time in a delayed naming task?
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Dissociating neural correlates for nouns and verbs.
- Author
-
Kevin A. Shapiro, Felix M. Mottaghy, Niels O. Schiller, Thorsten D. Poeppel, Michael Oliver Flüß, H.-W. Müller, Alfonso Caramazza, and Bernd J. Krause
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Noun-phrase production as a window to language selection: an ERP study
- Author
-
Sarah von Grebmer zu Wolfsthurn, Leticia Pablos, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
Male ,Non-Native Noun Phrase Production ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,EEGEvent-Related Potentials ,Multilingualism ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,P300N400 ,German ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Event-related potential ,Cognate Facilitation Effect ,Selection (linguistics) ,Humans ,Production (economics) ,Evoked Potentials ,Language ,Language production ,Gender Congruency Effect ,Cross-Linguistic Influence ,Electroencephalography ,Linguistics ,Target Language Selection ,language.human_language ,Noun phrase ,N400 ,body regions ,Late Language Learners ,Time course ,language ,Female ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Characterising the time course of non-native language production is critical in understanding the mechanisms behind successful communication. Yet, little is known about the modulating role of cross-linguistic influence (CLI) on the temporal unfolding of non-native production and the locus of target language selection. In this study, we explored CLI effects on non-native noun phrase production with behavioural and neural methods. We were particularly interested in the modulation of the P300 as an index for inhibitory control, and the N400 as an index for co-activation and CLI. German late learners of Spanish overtly named pictures while their EEG was monitored. Our results indicate traceable CLI effects at the behavioural and neural level in both early and late production stages. This suggests that speakers faced competition between the target and non-target language until advanced production stages. Our findings add important behavioural and neural evidence to the underpinnings of non-native production processes, in particular for late learners.
- Published
- 2021
35. Number in the Mental Lexicon
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller and Rinus G. Verdonschot
- Subjects
Speech production ,Number representation ,Mental lexicon ,Grammatical number ,Speech comprehension ,Psychology ,Linguistics - Abstract
This chapter discusses the representation and processing of grammatical number in language comprehension and production. Grammatical number is regarded as a syntactic feature stored with a word's lemma, i.e. the syntactic word, in the mental lexicon. The chapter discusses the representation of grammatical number in the mental lexicon and how this feature is selected. Comparisons to other grammatical features, such as grammatical gender, are also made. Moreover, the chapter reviews experimental work both in the area of language comprehension and language production to shed light on the processing of grammatical number in human cognition. The chapter closes with a report on recent experimental work conducted on Konso, a Cushitic language spoken in the south of Ethiopia. In Konso, the number feature interacts with the gender feature. Data from picture-naming experiments demonstrate that so-called plural gender should be interpreted as a gender feature rather than as a number feature.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Adjective-noun order in Papiamento-Dutch code-switching
- Author
-
M. Carmen Parafita Couto, Niels O. Schiller, Bastien Boutonnet, Annelies de Haan, Amy de Jong, Marlou Nadine Perquin, and Leticia Pablos
- Subjects
050101 languages & linguistics ,Linguistics and Language ,05 social sciences ,nominal constructions ,Papiamento ,code-switching ,Code-switching ,event-related potentials ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,Comprehension ,Event-related potential ,Order (business) ,Noun ,conflict sites ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Production (computer science) ,Psychology ,Dutch ,Adjective ,Word order - Abstract
In Papiamento-Dutch bilingual speech, the nominal construction is a potential ‘conflict site’ if there is an adjective from one language and a noun from the other. Adjective position is pre-nominal in Dutch (cf. rode wijn ‘red wine’) but post-nominal in Papiamento (cf. biña kòrá ‘wine red’). We test predictions concerning the mechanisms underpinning word order in noun-adjective switches derived from three accounts: (i) the adjective determines word order (Cantone & MacSwan, 2009), (ii) the matrix language determines word order (Myers-Scotton, 1993, 2002), and (iii) either order is possible (Di Sciullo, 2014). An analysis of spontaneous Papiamento-Dutch code-switching production (Parafita Couto & Gullberg, 2017) could not distinguish between these predictions. We used event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to measure online comprehension of code-switched utterances. We discuss how our results inform the three theoretical accounts and we relate them to syntactic coactivation and the production-comprehension link.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. High amyloid burden is associated with fewer specific words during spontaneous speech in individuals with subjective cognitive decline
- Author
-
Sander C.J. Verfaillie, Rosalinde E.R. Slot, Jurriaan Witteman, Sietske A.M. Sikkes, Ilanah J. Pruis, Lieke E.W. Vermaat, Mark A. van de Wiel, Bart N.M. van Berckel, Philip Scheltens, Niels O. Schiller, Niels Prins, Wiesje M. van der Flier, Radiology and nuclear medicine, Neurology, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neurodegeneration, Epidemiology and Data Science, APH - Personalized Medicine, APH - Methodology, and Academic Medical Center
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Amyloid ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Plaque, Amyloid ,Disease ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Vocabulary ,050105 experimental psychology ,Lemma (psycholinguistics) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Noun ,medicine ,Humans ,Speech ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Amyloid burden ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Cognitive decline ,Pathological ,Aged ,Language ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,05 social sciences ,Neuropsychology ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,Early Diagnosis ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Self-perceived word-finding difficulties are common in aging individuals as well as in Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Language and speech deficits are difficult to objectify with neuropsychological assessments. We therefore aimed to investigate whether amyloid, an early AD pathological hallmark, is associated with speech-derived semantic complexity. We included 63 individuals with subjective cognitive decline (age 64 ± 8, MMSE 29 ± 1), with amyloid status (positron emission tomography [PET] scans n = 59, or Aβ1-42 cerebrospinal fluid [CSF] n = 4). Spontaneous speech was recorded using three open-ended tasks (description of cookie theft picture, abstract painting and a regular Sunday), transcribed verbatim and subsequently, linguistic parameters were extracted using T-scan computational software, including specific words (content words, frequent, concrete and abstract nouns, and fillers), lexical complexity (lemma frequency, Type-Token-Ratio) and syntactic complexity (Developmental Level scale). Nineteen individuals (30%) had high levels of amyloid burden, and there were no differences between groups on conventional neuropsychological tests. Using multinomial regression with linguistic parameters (in tertiles), we found that high amyloid burden is associated with fewer concrete nouns (ORmiddle (95%CI): 7.6 (1.4–41.2), ORlowest: 6.7 (1.2–37.1)) and content words (ORlowest: 6.3 (1.0–38.1). In addition, we found an interaction for education between high amyloid burden and more abstract nouns. In conclusion, high amyloid burden was modestly associated with fewer specific words, but not with syntactic complexity, lexical complexity or conventional neuropsychological tests, suggesting that subtle spontaneous speech deficits might occur in preclinical AD.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A Comparison of Lexeme and Speech Syllables in Dutch.
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Antje S. Meyer, R. Harald Baayen, and Willem J. M. Levelt
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Classifiers in Mandarin Chinese: behavioral and electrophysiological evidence regarding their representation and processing
- Author
-
Shaoyun Huang and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
Male ,Linguistics and Language ,China ,Phrase ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Lexical Activation ,Event-Related Potentials ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,computer.software_genre ,Mandarin Chinese ,Overt Speech Production ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Numeral system ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Semantic similarity ,Competitive Selection ,Noun ,Classifier (linguistics) ,Selection (linguistics) ,Humans ,Chinese Classifier Feature ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Evoked Potentials ,Language ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Electroencephalography ,Noun phrase ,language.human_language ,Semantics ,language ,Female ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Psychology ,computer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Natural language processing - Abstract
In Chinese, when objects are named with their quantity, a numeral classifier must be inserted between the quantifier and the noun to produce a grammatically correct quantifier + classifier + noun phrase. In this study, we adopted the picture-word interference paradigm to examine participants’ naming latencies for multiple objects and their electroencephalogram in four conditions by manipulating two factors, i.e. semantic relatedness and classifier congruency. Results show that in noun phrase production, naming latencies are significantly longer in classifier-incongruent and semantically related conditions than in classifier-congruent and semantically unrelated conditions. Also, an N400-like effect was observed and found to be stronger in classifier-incongruent and semantically unrelated conditions. Together, the behavioral data and event-related potential analyses suggest that the use of classifiers as lexico-syntactic features in Mandarin Chinese takes place via a competitive selection process in noun phrase production.
- Published
- 2021
40. Context matters for tone and intonation processing in Mandarin
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Min Liu, and Yiya Chen
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Sociology and Political Science ,Mandarin ,050109 social psychology ,Context (language use) ,Mandarin Chinese ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Speech and Hearing ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Constraining Context ,Language ,Tone ,Intonation ,05 social sciences ,Neutral Context ,Intonation (linguistics) ,Tone (linguistics) ,General Medicine ,language.human_language ,Linguistics ,Semantics ,Speech Perception ,language ,Psychology ,Sentence - Abstract
In tonal languages such as Mandarin, both lexical tone and sentence intonation are primarily signaled by F0. Their F0 encodings are sometimes in conflict and sometimes in congruency. The present study investigated how tone and intonation, with F0 encodings in conflict or in congruency, are processed and how semantic context may affect their processing. To this end, tone and intonation identification experiments were conducted in both semantically neutral and constraining contexts. Results showed that the overall performance of tone identification was better than that of intonation. Specifically, tone identification was seldom affected by intonation information irrespective of semantic contexts. However, intonation identification, particularly question intonation, was susceptible to the final lexical tone identity and affected by the semantic context. In the semantically neutral context, questions ending with a rising tone and a falling tone were equally difficult to identify. In the semantically constraining context, questions ending with a falling tone were much better identified than those ending with a rising tone. This perceptual asymmetry suggests that top-down information provided by the semantically constraining context can play a facilitating role for listeners to disentangle intonational information from tonal information, but mainly in sentences with the lexical falling tone in the final position.
- Published
- 2021
41. Dual Function of Primary Somatosensory Cortex in Cognitive Control of Language: Evidence from Resting State fMRI
- Author
-
Fatemeh Tabassi Mofrad, Andrew Jahn, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,somatosensory cortex ,Somatosensory system ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Humans ,cognitive control ,Control (linguistics) ,Default mode network ,Dual function ,Language ,Brain Mapping ,multiband EPI ,Resting state fMRI ,Clinical neuroscience ,General Neuroscience ,functional connectivity ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,rs-fMRI - Abstract
Resting state functional connectivity can be leveraged to investigate bilingual individual differences in cognitive control of language; however, thus far no report is provided on how the connectivity profiles of brain functional networks at rest point to different language control behavior in bilinguals. In order to address this gap in state-of-the-art research we did a functional connectivity analysis on the resting state data acquired via multiband EPI to investigate three resting state networks of interest namely, the frontoparietal network (FPN), the salience network (SN), and the default mode network (DMN), which are related to cognitive control, between two groups of Dutch–English bilinguals based on how they performed in a language switching task. Results demonstrated that there is the increased coupling of the left primary somatosensory cortex with the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in the group with better performance in cognitive control of language and the increased coupling of the right primary somatosensory cortex with the inferior parietal cortex in the group with poorer performance in this executive function. As regards these results, we claim that the primary somatosensory cortex has a dual func- tion in coupling with the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the inferior parietal cortex in the FPN, and in fact, in what characterizes bilingual individual differences in cognitive control of language in healthy participants. The results of this study provide a model for future research in cognitive control of language and may serve as a ref- erence in clinical neuroscience when bilinguals are diagnosed with dysfunction in cognitive control.
- Published
- 2020
42. The time course of speech production revisited: no early orthographic effect, even in Mandarin Chinese
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Man Wang, Minghu Jiang, and Yiya Chen
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Speech production ,Computer science ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Zhàng ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,computer.software_genre ,Mandarin Chinese ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Semantic memory ,Encoding (semiotics) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Language production ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Orthographic projection ,language.human_language ,language ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Natural language processing ,Orthography - Abstract
Most psycholinguistic models of speech production agree on an earlier semantic processing stage and a later word-form encoding stage. Using a logographic language, Mandarin Chinese, Zhang and Weekes [2009. Orthographic facilitation effects on spoken word production: Evidence from Chinese. Language and Cognitive Processes, 24(7–8), 1082–1096. https://doi.org/10.1080/01690960802042133] reported an early effect of orthography in a picture-word-interference study and suggested orthography affects speech production via a lexical-semantic pathway at an early stage. This early orthographic effect without co-occurrence of phonological effect, however, was not replicated [Zhao, La Heij, & Schiller, 2012. Orthographic and phonological facilitation in speech production: New evidence from picture naming in Chinese. Acta Psychologica, 139(2), 272–280. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2011.12.001]. The present study aimed to dissociate further the semantic and phonological representations from orthography by using simplex Chinese characters. The results of Experiment 1 and 2 revealed an orthographic effect but only at a similar point in time as the phonological effect, both of which followed the semantic effect. Our results thus raise further doubts about the role of orthography at the conceptual level of speech planning and lend new evidence to a two-step model of speech production.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Basic measures of prosody in spontaneous speech of children with early and late cochlear implantation
- Author
-
Niels O. Schiller, Daan J. van de Velde, Jeroen J. Briaire, Mieke Beers, Vincent J. van Heuven, Johan H. M. Frijns, Claartje Levelt, and Fryske Akademy (FA)
- Subjects
Male ,Auditory perception ,Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Deafness ,Audiology ,Language and Linguistics ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Speech Production Measurement ,Phonetics ,Assistive technology ,Suprasegmentals ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,Speech ,Postoperative Period ,Child ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Prosody ,Cochlear implantation ,Spontaneous speech ,Age differences ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Infant ,Cochlear Implantation ,Cochlear Implants ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Child Language - Abstract
PurposeRelative to normally hearing (NH) peers, the speech of children with cochlear implants (CIs) has been found to have deviations such as a high fundamental frequency, elevated jitter and shimmer, and inadequate intonation. However, two important dimensions of prosody (temporal and spectral) have not been systematically investigated. Given that, in general, the resolution in CI hearing is best for the temporal dimension and worst for the spectral dimension, we expected this hierarchy to be reflected in the amount of CI speech's deviation from NH speech. Deviations, however, were expected to diminish with increasing device experience.MethodOf 9 Dutch early- and late-implanted (division at 2 years of age) children and 12 hearing age-matched NH controls, spontaneous speech was recorded at 18, 24, and 30 months after implantation (CI) or birth (NH). Six spectral and temporal outcome measures were compared between groups, sessions, and genders.ResultsOn most measures, interactions of Group and/or Gender with Session were significant. For CI recipients as compared with controls, performance on temporal measures was not in general more deviant than spectral measures, although differences were found for individual measures. The late-implanted group had a tendency to be closer to the NH group than the early-implanted group. Groups converged over time.ConclusionsResults did not support the phonetic dimension hierarchy hypothesis, suggesting that the appropriateness of the production of basic prosodic measures does not depend on auditory resolution. Rather, it seems to depend on the amount of control necessary for speech production.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Prosody perception and production by children with cochlear implants
- Author
-
Johan H. M. Frijns, Claartje Levelt, Jeroen J. Briaire, Vincent J. van Heuven, Daan J. van de Velde, Mieke Beers, Niels O. Schiller, and Fryske Akademy (FA)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Auditory perception ,Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Deafness ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Correlation ,prosody ,Emotion perception ,Perception ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Emotional expression ,Child ,Prosody ,General Psychology ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Linguistics ,Cochlear Implantation ,Cochlear Implants ,Emotional prosody ,Case-Control Studies ,Auditory Perception ,Speech Perception ,Female ,phonetic cues ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The perception and production of emotional and linguistic (focus) prosody were compared in children with cochlear implants (CI) and normally hearing (NH) peers. Thirteen CI and thirteen hearing-age-matched school-aged NH children were tested, as baseline, on non-verbal emotion understanding, non-word repetition, and stimulus identification and naming. Main tests were verbal emotion discrimination, verbal focus position discrimination, acted emotion production, and focus production. Productions were evaluated by NH adult Dutch listeners. All scores between groups were comparable, except a lower score for the CI group for non-word repetition. Emotional prosody perception and production scores correlated weakly for CI children but were uncorrelated for NH children. In general, hearing age weakly predicted emotion production but not perception. Non-verbal emotional (but not linguistic) understanding predicted CI children's (but not controls’) emotion perception and production. In conclusion, increasing time in sound might facilitate vocal emotional expression, possibly requiring independently maturing emotion perception skills.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Connectivity of the hippocampus and Broca's area during acquisition of a novel grammar
- Author
-
Johanneke Caspers, Niels O. Schiller, Mischa de Rover, and Olga Kepinska
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Left and right ,Artificial grammar learning ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Hippocampus ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,Young Adult ,Functional connectivity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Broca's area ,Neural Pathways ,Humans ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Prefrontal cortex ,Language ,media_common ,Brain Mapping ,Grammar ,Mechanism (biology) ,fMRI ,05 social sciences ,Language learning ,Language acquisition ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neurology ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Following Opitz and Friederici (2003) suggesting interactions of the hippocampal system and the prefrontal cortex as the neural mechanism underlying novel grammar learning, the present fMRI study investigated functional connectivity of bilateral BA 44/45 and the hippocampus during an artificial grammar learning (AGL) task. Our results, contrary to the previously reported interactions, demonstrated parallel (but separate) contributions of both regions, each with their own interactions, to the process of novel grammar acquisition. The functional connectivity pattern of Broca's area pointed to the importance of coherent activity of left frontal areas around the core language processing region for successful grammar learning. Furthermore, connectivity patterns of left and right hippocampi (predominantly with occipital areas) were found to be a strong predictor of high performance on the task. Finally, increasing functional connectivity over time of both left and right BA 44/45 with the right posterior cingulate cortex and the right temporo-parietal areas points to the importance of multimodal and attentional processes supporting novel grammar acquisition. Moreover, it highlights the right-hemispheric involvement in initial stages of L2 learning. These latter interactions were found to operate irrespective of the task performance, making them an obligatory mechanism accompanying novel grammar learning.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Cross-linguistic interference in late language learners: An ERP study
- Author
-
Leticia Pablos Robles, Niels O. Schiller, and Sarah von Grebmer zu Wolfsthurn
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,P600 effect ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Multilingualism ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Spanish ,Cognate facilitation effect ,Language and Linguistics ,Single-trial EEG analysis ,German ,Speech and Hearing ,Grammatical gender ,Late language learners ,Noun ,Humans ,Cognate ,Evoked Potentials ,Gender congruency effect ,Language ,Cross-linguistic interference ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,P600 ,Electroencephalography ,Linguistics ,language.human_language ,Noun phrase ,language ,Psychology ,ERP ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
This study investigated cross-linguistic interference in German low-proficient late learners of Spanish. We examined the modulating influence of gender congruency and cognate status using a syntactic violation paradigm. Behavioural results demonstrated that participants were more sensitive to similarities at the syntactic level (gender congruency) than to phonological and orthographic overlap (cognate status). Electrophysiological data showed that they were sensitive to syntactic violations (P600 effect) already in early acquisition stages. However, P600 effect sizes were not modulated by gender congruency or cognate status. Therefore, our late learners of Spanish did not seem to be susceptible to influences from inherent noun properties when processing non-native noun phrases at the neural level. Our results contribute to the discussion about the neural correlates of grammatical gender processing and sensitivity to syntactic violations in early acquisition stages.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Integrating computer games in speech therapy for children who stutter.
- Author
-
Daniil Umanski, Walter A. Kosters, Fons J. Verbeek, and Niels O. Schiller
- Published
- 2008
48. Neural correlates of spoken word production in semantic and phonological blocked cyclic naming
- Author
-
Zeshu Shao, Niels O. Schiller, Man Wang, and Yiya Chen
- Subjects
Spoken word ,Linguistics and Language ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Language production ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Speech recognition ,05 social sciences ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Phonology ,Electroencephalography ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Lexical selection ,Homogeneous ,Incremental learning ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The blocked cyclic naming paradigm has been increasingly employed to investigate the mechanisms underlying spoken word production. Semantic homogeneity typically elicits longer naming latencies than heterogeneity; however, it is debated whether competitive lexical selection or incremental learning underlies this effect. The current study manipulated both semantic and phonological homogeneity and used behavioural and electrophysiological measurements to provide evidence that can distinguish between the two accounts. Results show that naming latencies are longer in semantically homogeneous blocks, but shorter in phonologically homogeneous blocks, relative to heterogeneity. The semantic factor significantly modulates electrophysiological waveforms from 200 ms and the phonological factor from 350 ms after picture presentation. A positive component was demonstrated in both manipulations, possibly reflecting a task-related top-down bias in performing blocked cyclic naming. These results provide novel insights into the neural correlates of blocked cyclic naming and further contribute to the understanding of spoken word production.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The role of F0 and duration in the identification of wh-in-situ questions in Persian
- Author
-
Johanneke Caspers, Zohreh Shiamizadeh, and Niels O. Schiller
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,media_common.quotation_subject ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Perception ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Prosody ,Modality (semiotics) ,Persian ,media_common ,060201 languages & linguistics ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,Intonation (linguistics) ,Contrast (statistics) ,06 humanities and the arts ,language.human_language ,Linguistics ,Computer Science Applications ,Categorization ,Modeling and Simulation ,0602 languages and literature ,language ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Psychology ,Software ,Sentence - Abstract
Prosody plays an influential role in the recognition of Persian wh-in-situ questions (Shiamizadeh et al., in press). Perception of speech intonation is supported by several prosodic correlates (Lehiste, 1970). For instance, perception studies demonstrate that prosodic correlates do not contribute similarly to the identification of contrasts (oppositions) in speech intonation, and F0 contributes more prominently to the categorization of contrast in speech intonation (Lehiste, 1976; Peng et al., 2012). The current study manipulates a number of different prosodic correlates to investigate their relative contribution to sentence type categorization in Persian. This study also investigates whether identification is improved in congruent cue conditions in comparison to conflicting cue conditions. For this purpose, a perception experiment was designed in which native Persian speakers were required to listen to manipulated stimuli and decide if they perceived a wh-question or a declarative sentence. Based on the literature, we expect a primary role for F0 and a secondary role for duration in the perception of sentence modality contrasts. We also predict improved identification of sentence type in matching cue conditions in comparison to mismatching cue conditions. The results of the study confirm our predictions, i.e. a primary role of F0, and an increased identification in the matching cue condition is applicable to the perception of the contrast between Persian wh-in-situ questions and declaratives.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The perception of emotion and focus prosody with varying acoustic cues in cochlear implant simulations with varying filter slopes
- Author
-
Mieke Beers, Niels O. Schiller, Joost R. van Ginkel, Daan J. van de Velde, Claartje Levelt, Jeroen J. Briaire, Vincent J. van Heuven, Johan H. M. Frijns, and Fryske Akademy (FA)
- Subjects
Speech Communication ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech perception ,Adolescent ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Voice Quality ,Acoustics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Audiology ,01 natural sciences ,Speech Acoustics ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Discrimination, Psychological ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Phonetics ,Cochlear implant ,Perception ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Octave ,Humans ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Prosody ,010301 acoustics ,media_common ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Auditory Threshold ,Cochlear Implantation ,Electric Stimulation ,Cochlear Implants ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Duration (music) ,Speech Perception ,Audiometry, Pure-Tone ,Female ,Cues ,Audiometry ,Audiometry, Speech ,Psychology - Abstract
This study aimed to find the optimal filter slope for cochlear implant simulations (vocoding) by testing the effect of a wide range of slopes on the discrimination of emotional and linguistic (focus) prosody, with varying availability of F0 and duration cues. Forty normally hearing participants judged if (non-)vocoded sentences were pronounced with happy or sad emotion, or with adjectival or nominal focus. Sentences were recorded as natural stimuli and manipulated to contain only emotion- or focus-relevant segmental duration or F0 information or both, and then noise-vocoded with 5, 20, 80, 120, and 160 dB/octave filter slopes. Performance increased with steeper slopes, but only up to 120 dB/octave, with bigger effects for emotion than for focus perception. For emotion, results with both cues most closely resembled results with F0, while for focus results with both cues most closely resembled those with duration, showing emotion perception relies primarily on F0, and focus perception on duration. This suggests that filter slopes affect focus perception less than emotion perception because for emotion, F0 is both more informative and more affected. The performance increase until extreme filter slope values suggests that much performance improvement in prosody perception is still to be gained for CI users.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.