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1
The exceptional nature of the first person in natural story processing and the transfer of egocentricity
Abstract: Human language enables us to externalise self-internal information (e.g. emotions or beliefs that are not readily accessible to others). Thus, language bridges the gap between the self and the other (e.g. Frith and Frith, 2010) in a way that possibly no other communication system can provide. In many languages, the difference between the self and others is directly reflected in the distinction between first (“I”), second (“you”) and third person (“he, she”) marking. In the present study, we compared ERPs to first, second and third person pronouns during the comprehension of an audio-book version of The Little Prince. Our results revealed a strong P300 response following first person pronouns that is independent of contextual factors. In line with previous research on self-relevance and the P300 (e.g. Knolle, Schröger, and Kotz, 2013b), our results suggest that first- person marking is an attentional cue for self-relevance that is at the core of successful narrative comprehension.
Keyword: ddc:150; ddc:400
URL: https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/46324/
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2
Domain-general neural correlates of dependency formation: Using complex tones to simulate language
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3
Predicting discourse topics: Evidence for the privileged role of the syntactic subject during the comprehension of naturalistic auditory stories using event-related potentials ...
Brilmayer, Ingmar; Kandylaki, Katerina; Primus, Beatrice. - : Monash University, 2016
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raw data - Domain-general neural correlates of dependency formation: using complex tones to simulate language ...
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Domain-general neural correlates of dependency formation: using complex tones to simulate language ...
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raw data - Domain-general neural correlates of dependency formation: using complex tones to simulate language ...
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Domain-general neural correlates of dependency formation: using complex tones to simulate language ...
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raw data - Domain-general neural correlates of dependency formation: using complex tones to simulate language ...
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9
Individual differences in sentence processing based on handedness and family sinistrality in left- and right-handers ...
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10
Individual differences in sentence processing based on handedness and family sinistrality in left- and right-handers ...
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