NCCLFeb 3, 2025

Probabilistic adaptation of language comprehension for individual speakers: evidence from neural oscillations

arXiv:2502.01299v25 citationsh-index: 7Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci
AI Analysis

This research addresses how social cognition influences language processing, providing incremental insights into neural mechanisms of adaptation.

The study investigated how listeners adapt language comprehension based on speakers' stereotype-incongruent statements, finding that high-beta oscillations adjust general expectations and theta oscillations update speaker-specific mental models, with effects varying by base rates and listener openness.

Listeners adapt language comprehension based on their mental representations of speakers, but how these representations are updated remains unclear. We investigated whether listeners probabilistically adapt comprehension based on the frequency of speakers making stereotype-incongruent statements. In two EEG experiments, participants heard speakers make stereotype-congruent or incongruent statements, with incongruency base rate manipulated. In Experiment 1, stereotype-incongruent statements decreased high-beta (21-30 Hz) and theta (4-6 Hz) oscillatory power in the low base rate condition but increased it in the high base rate condition. The theta effect varied with listeners' openness trait: less open-minded participants tended to show theta increases to stereotype incongruencies, while more open-minded participants tended to show theta decreases. In Experiment 2, we dissociated incongruency base rate from the target speaker by manipulating it using a non-target speaker and found that only the high-beta effect persisted. Our findings reveal two potential mechanisms: a speaker-general mechanism (indicated by high-beta oscillations) that adjusts overall expectations about hearing statements that violate social stereotypes, and a speaker-specific mechanism (indicated by theta oscillations) that updates a more detailed mental model specifically about an individual speaker. These findings provide evidence for how language processing interacts with social cognition.

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