Abnormal processing of prosodic boundary in adults who stutter: An ERP study

•Prosodic structural priming did occur in both NFS and AWS.•AWS showed prosodic priming effect in the midline, while NFS did not.•AWS exhibited a left hemisphere asymmetry for prosodic priming.•Prosodic priming was modulated by the task that participants completed. Characterized by involuntary disru...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and cognition 2018-12, Vol.128, p.17-27
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Meng, Xing, Yushan, Zhao, Liming, Deng, Nali, Li, Weijun
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container_title Brain and cognition
container_volume 128
creator Liu, Meng
Xing, Yushan
Zhao, Liming
Deng, Nali
Li, Weijun
description •Prosodic structural priming did occur in both NFS and AWS.•AWS showed prosodic priming effect in the midline, while NFS did not.•AWS exhibited a left hemisphere asymmetry for prosodic priming.•Prosodic priming was modulated by the task that participants completed. Characterized by involuntary disruptions in fluency speech, adults who stutter (AWS) are different from normally fluent speakers (NFS) in speech-language processing indices of phonological, semantic, and syntactic information coding. However, the neural base of the prosodic information (i.e. prosodic boundary) processing in AWS is still elusive at this point. To investigate this question, Chinese temporarily ambiguous phrases (narrative-object/modifier-noun construction) were presented in pairs to AWS and NFS in both lexical judgment and structural judgment task by using structural priming paradigm. Results showed that both AWS and NFS produced prosodic priming in the two tasks, however, AWS were more sensitive to the priming than NFS in the midline. Besides, unlike the greater right hemisphere involvement of priming effect for NFS, AWS exhibited a left hemisphere asymmetry in the lateral areas. In addition, structural judgment task elicited stronger prosodic priming effect than lexical judgment task for both groups. These results indicate that the mode of prosodic priming for AWS is different from NFS, and the priming effect is influenced by the experimental task that participants completed.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.bandc.2018.10.009
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Characterized by involuntary disruptions in fluency speech, adults who stutter (AWS) are different from normally fluent speakers (NFS) in speech-language processing indices of phonological, semantic, and syntactic information coding. However, the neural base of the prosodic information (i.e. prosodic boundary) processing in AWS is still elusive at this point. To investigate this question, Chinese temporarily ambiguous phrases (narrative-object/modifier-noun construction) were presented in pairs to AWS and NFS in both lexical judgment and structural judgment task by using structural priming paradigm. Results showed that both AWS and NFS produced prosodic priming in the two tasks, however, AWS were more sensitive to the priming than NFS in the midline. Besides, unlike the greater right hemisphere involvement of priming effect for NFS, AWS exhibited a left hemisphere asymmetry in the lateral areas. 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subjects Ambiguous phrases
Cognitive ability
ERPs
Hemispheric laterality
Information processing
Judgment
Language
Neural coding
Prosodic boundary
Speech
Stutter
Stuttering
title Abnormal processing of prosodic boundary in adults who stutter: An ERP study
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