Electrophysiological evidence for the role of shared space in online comprehension of spatial demonstratives
Source
Cognition, 136, (2015), pp. 64-84ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ DCC BO
SW OZ DCC PL
Taalwetenschap
Journal title
Cognition
Volume
vol. 136
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 64
Page end
p. 84
Subject
110 000 Neurocognition of Language; 110 007 PLUS: A neurocomputational model for the Processing of Linguistic Utterances based on the Unification-Space architecture; 110 009 The human brain and Chinese prosody; 110 012 Social cognition of verbal communication; 110 013 Binding and the MUC-model; 110 014 Public activities; DI-BCB_DCC_Theme 1: Language and Communication; Giving cognition a hand: Linking spatial cognition to linguistic expression in native and late signers and bimodal bilinguals; Language in Mind; Language in our hands: Acquisition of spatial language in deaf and hearing children; Multimodal language and communication; Psycholinguistics; niet-RU-publicatiesAbstract
A fundamental property of language is that it can be used to refer to entities in the extra-linguistic physical context of a conversation in order to establish a joint focus of attention on a referent. Typological and psycholinguistic work across a wide range of languages has put forward at least two different theoretical views on demonstrative reference. Here we contrasted and tested these two accounts by investigating the electrophysiological brain activity underlying the construction of indexical meaning in comprehension. In two EEG experiments, participants watched pictures of a speaker who referred to one of two objects using speech and an index-finger pointing gesture. In contrast with separately collected native speakers' linguistic intuitions, N400 effects showed a preference for a proximal demonstrative when speaker and addressee were in a face-to-face orientation and all possible referents were located in the shared space between them, irrespective of the physical proximity of the referent to the speaker. These findings reject egocentric proximity-based accounts of demonstrative reference, support a sociocentric approach to deixis, suggest that interlocutors construe a shared space during conversation, and imply that the psychological proximity of a referent may be more important than its physical proximity.
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