N. Azevedo, Arielle Crestol, Kathleen Berkun, Alexandra Papathanasopoulos, Leen Yamani, Alexander Rokos, E. Kehayia, S. Blain-Moraes
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A N400 event-related potential elicitation paradigm for Canadian French speakers*
The N400 event-related brain potential (ERP) can be used to evaluate language comprehension, and may be a
particularly powerful tool for the assessment of individuals who are behaviourally unresponsive. This study presents a set of
semantic violation sentences developed in Canadian French and characterizes their ability to elicit an N400 effect in healthy
adults. A novel set of 100 French sentences were created and normed through two surveys that assessed sentence cloze probability
(n = 98) and semantic plausibility (n = 99). The best 80 sentences (40 congruent; 40
incongruent) were selected for the final stimulus set and tested for their ability to elicit N400 effects in 33 French-speaking
individuals. The final stimulus set successfully generated an N400 effect in the grand-average across all individuals, and in the
grand-average within age groups (young, middle-age, and older adults). On a single-subject level, the final stimulus set elicited
N400 effects in 76% of the participants. The feasibility of using this stimulus set to assess semantic processing in behaviourally
unresponsive individuals was demonstrated in a case example of a French individual in a disorder of consciousness. These sentences
enable the inclusion of Canadian French speakers in this simple assessment of language comprehension abilities.
期刊介绍:
The Mental Lexicon is an interdisciplinary journal that provides an international forum for research that bears on the issues of the representation and processing of words in the mind and brain. We encourage both the submission of original research and reviews of significant new developments in the understanding of the mental lexicon. The journal publishes work that includes, but is not limited to the following: Models of the representation of words in the mind Computational models of lexical access and production Experimental investigations of lexical processing Neurolinguistic studies of lexical impairment. Functional neuroimaging and lexical representation in the brain Lexical development across the lifespan Lexical processing in second language acquisition The bilingual mental lexicon Lexical and morphological structure across languages Formal models of lexical structure Corpus research on the lexicon New experimental paradigms and statistical techniques for mental lexicon research.