Brain responses reveal hardwired detection of native-language rule violations




Olli Aaltonen, Åke Hellström, Maija S. Peltola, Janne Savela, Henna Tamminen, Heidi Lehtola

PublisherElsevier

2008

Neuroscience Letters

444

1

56

59

4

0304-3940

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2008.07.095



Mismatch negativity (MMN) is a neural correlate of the preattentive detection of any change in the acoustic characteristics of sounds. Herewe provide evidence that violations of a purely phonological constraint in a listener’s native language can also elicit the brain’s automatic change-detection response. The MMN differed between Finnish and Estonian listeners, conditions being equal except for the native language of the listeners. We used two experimental conditions: synthetic vowels in isolation and the same vowels embedded in a pseudo-word context. MMN responses to isolated vowels were similar for Finns and Estonians, while the same vowels in a pseudoword context elicited different MMN patterns depending on the listener’s mother tongue.



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