Publication year
2014Author(s)
Number of pages
6 p.
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 111, 51, (2014), pp. 18183-18188ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
PI Group Intention & Action
Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging
SW OZ BSI KLP
PI Group Neurobiology of Language
PI Group MR Techniques in Brain Function
SW OZ DCC PL
SW OZ DCC CO
Journal title
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
Volume
vol. 111
Issue
iss. 51
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 18183
Page end
p. 18188
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; 111 000 Intention & Action; 150 000 MR Techniques in Brain Function; 150 031 Building connectomes with MEG; Action, intention, and motor control; Experimental Psychopathology and Treatment; Psycholinguistics; Language in InteractionAbstract
How can we understand each other during communicative interactions? An influential suggestion holds that communicators are primed by each other's behaviors, with associative mechanisms automatically coordinating the production of communicative signals and the comprehension of their meanings. An alternative suggestion posits that mutual understanding requires shared conceptualizations of a signal's use, i.e., "conceptual pacts" that are abstracted away from specific experiences. Both accounts predict coherent neural dynamics across communicators, aligned either to the occurrence of a signal or to the dynamics of conceptual pacts. Using coherence spectral-density analysis of cerebral activity simultaneously measured in pairs of communicators, this study shows that establishing mutual understanding of novel signals synchronizes cerebral dynamics across communicators' right temporal lobes. This interpersonal cerebral coherence occurred only within pairs with a shared communicative history, and at temporal scales independent from signals' occurrences. These findings favor the notion that meaning emerges from shared conceptualizations of a signal's use.
Subsidient
NWO (Grant code:info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/NWO/Gravitation/024.001.006)
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [229134]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3664]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28720]
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