23In the neurobiology of language, a fundamental challenge is deconfounding syntax from semantics.
24Changes in syntactic structure usually correlate with changes in meaning. We approached this 25 challenge from a new angle. We deployed word lists, which are usually the unstructured control in 26 studies of syntax, as both the test and the control stimulus. Three-noun lists (lamps, dolls, guitars) 27 were embedded in sentences (The eccentric man hoarded lamps, dolls, guitars…) and in longer lists 28 (forks, pen, toilet, rodeo, graves, drums, mulch, lamps, dolls, guitars…). This allowed us to perfectly 29 control both lexical characteristics and local combinatorics: the same words occurred in both 30 conditions and in neither case did the list items locally compose into phrases (e.g. 'lamps' and 'dolls' 31 do not form a phrase). But in one case, the list partakes in a syntactic tree, while in the other, it does 32 not. Being embedded inside a syntactic tree increased source-localized MEG activity at ~250-300ms 33 from word onset in the left inferior frontal cortex, at ~300-350ms in the left anterior temporal lobe 34 and, most reliably, at ~330-400ms in left posterior temporal cortex. In contrast, effects of semantic 35 association strength, which we also varied, localized in left temporo-parietal cortex, with high 36 associations increasing activity at around 400ms. This dissociation offers a novel characterization of 37 the structure vs. meaning contrast in the brain: The fronto-temporal network that is familiar from 38 studies of sentence processing can be driven by the sheer presence of global sentence structure, while 39 associative semantics has a more posterior neural signature.
41Running head: NEURAL PROCESSING OF LISTS WITH AND WITHOUT SYNTAX 3
SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT
42Human languages all have a syntax, which both enables the infinitude of linguistic creativity and 43 determines what is grammatical in a language. The neurobiology of syntactic processing has, however, 44 been challenging to characterize despite decades of study. One reason is pure manipulations of syntax are 45 difficult to design. The approach here offers a perfect control of two variables that are notoriously hard to 46 keep constant when syntax is manipulated: word meaning and phrasal combinatorics. The same noun lists 47 104 MATERIALS AND METHODS 105 Stimuli & Design106We selected concrete English nouns based on the concreteness rating corpus by Brysbaert, Warriner,
107and Kuperman (2014). From this pool, we then selected nouns that are matched in their log frequency 108 from the SUBTLEX-US corpus (Brysbaert & New, 2009). The critical list nouns were changed from 109 their singular form to plural to block potential noun-noun compounding (e.g. lamp doll could form a 110 Running head: NEURAL PROCESSING OF LISTS WITH AND WITHOUT SYNTAX 7 phrase, but lamps dolls could not). These plural nouns were then used to construct our critical three-111 noun lists such as lamps, dolls, guitars. The lexical characteristics are summarized in Table 2....