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Neurophysiological evidence of rapid holistic tone-based lexical access

Kochančikaitė, Renata LU ; Shtyrov, Yury ; Horne, Merle LU orcid and Roll, Mikael LU (2026) In Brain and Language 272.
Abstract
Word accents are restricted by a word’s morphological structure but also distinguish lexical meanings in minimal pairs. We investigated how early tonal information carried by morphophonemic word accents influences rapid lexical access in native speakers. We also asked whether tone-bearing words are decomposed into morphemes and word accents, or retrieved holistically via full-form neural representations. Here, suffix morpheme and word accent tone were varied orthogonally to create valid and invalid combinations of tone and morphological structure/segmental information. These stimuli were presented in a passive oddball paradigm during an electroencephalography experiment, and mismatch negativity (MMN) responses were obtained.
Valid... (More)
Word accents are restricted by a word’s morphological structure but also distinguish lexical meanings in minimal pairs. We investigated how early tonal information carried by morphophonemic word accents influences rapid lexical access in native speakers. We also asked whether tone-bearing words are decomposed into morphemes and word accents, or retrieved holistically via full-form neural representations. Here, suffix morpheme and word accent tone were varied orthogonally to create valid and invalid combinations of tone and morphological structure/segmental information. These stimuli were presented in a passive oddball paradigm during an electroencephalography experiment, and mismatch negativity (MMN) responses were obtained.
Valid combinations elicited an early-onset lexical MMN, with main sources in the left middle posterior temporal lobe—an area implicated in lexical memory. Words with morphophonemic tones appear to have full-form lexical memory traces that join segmental and tonal information. As incorrect word accent tones impeded automatic lexical retrieval, we also conclude that word accents may function in a manner similar to lexical tones in distinguishing lexical meanings. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Mismatch Negativity, Word accents, Prosody, Lexical access, Morphophonology, Swedish, EEG, ERP, MMN, Word accents, MMN, Lexical access, Morphophonology, Lexical tone, Word memory traces
in
Brain and Language
volume
272
article number
105670
pages
12 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:41274209
ISSN
0093-934X
DOI
10.1016/j.bandl.2025.105670
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9a297f1d-60d2-4163-8da6-931579ff9df4
date added to LUP
2025-12-04 13:27:46
date last changed
2025-12-11 14:59:53
@article{9a297f1d-60d2-4163-8da6-931579ff9df4,
  abstract     = {{Word accents are restricted by a word’s morphological structure but also distinguish lexical meanings in minimal pairs. We investigated how early tonal information carried by morphophonemic word accents influences rapid lexical access in native speakers. We also asked whether tone-bearing words are decomposed into morphemes and word accents, or retrieved holistically via full-form neural representations. Here, suffix morpheme and word accent tone were varied orthogonally to create valid and invalid combinations of tone and morphological structure/segmental information. These stimuli were presented in a passive oddball paradigm during an electroencephalography experiment, and mismatch negativity (MMN) responses were obtained.<br/>Valid combinations elicited an early-onset lexical MMN, with main sources in the left middle posterior temporal lobe—an area implicated in lexical memory. Words with morphophonemic tones appear to have full-form lexical memory traces that join segmental and tonal information. As incorrect word accent tones impeded automatic lexical retrieval, we also conclude that word accents may function in a manner similar to lexical tones in distinguishing lexical meanings.}},
  author       = {{Kochančikaitė, Renata and Shtyrov, Yury and Horne, Merle and Roll, Mikael}},
  issn         = {{0093-934X}},
  keywords     = {{Mismatch Negativity, Word accents, Prosody, Lexical access, Morphophonology, Swedish, EEG, ERP, MMN; Word accents; MMN; Lexical access; Morphophonology; Lexical tone; Word memory traces}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Brain and Language}},
  title        = {{Neurophysiological evidence of rapid holistic tone-based lexical access}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2025.105670}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.bandl.2025.105670}},
  volume       = {{272}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}