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The role of animacy in metaphor processing of Mandarin Chinese: An Event-Related Potential (ERP) study
Ji, Haojie1; Qi, Senqing1; Xu, Shiyang3; Chen, Jinxin1; Dai, David Yun4; Li, Yadan1; Hu, Weiping1,2
2020-11-01
Source PublicationJournal of Neurolinguistics
ISSN0911-6044
Volume56Issue:100915
Abstract

Many ERP studies have highlighted processing difficulty for animacy violation in language, more so than non-violated sentences. However, all of these findings were for non-figurative language, and studies have rarely looked at the figurative language, such as metaphors involving animacy violation, which could be integrated to make novel and acceptable meaning. The present study aimed at assessing the role of animacy in metaphorical comprehension of Mandarin Chinese. ERPs were recorded as healthy participants read metaphor or literal sentences with animate or inanimate actors as sentence-initial noun, while the target words were measured at the verb and the second argument (object) of the sentences with subject-verb-object (SVO) structure. As expected, the animacy violations elicited a significant N400 effect by the target verb in the metaphor with inanimate initial-nouns. At the objects, the N400 amplitudes associated with metaphors were not regulated by animacy. Subsequently, the analysis revealed a significant difference in the P600 amplitudes between inanimate and animate metaphorical conditions. The metaphors with inanimate actor elicited an attenuated P600 as compared with the animate counterparts and converged to the same level as literal sentences, reflecting the less effortful metaphor-relevant mapping process. These results suggest that animacy violation may facilitate the integration of the reanalysis stage for metaphorical comprehension, and the conflict strength (animacy violation vs. no animacy violation) modulates the time course of metaphor processing in Mandarin Chinese. The present study yields new insights into the role of animacy in the online linguistic comprehension.

KeywordMetaphor Animacy Erp N400 P600 Conflict Strength
DOI10.1016/j.jneuroling.2020.100915
URLView the original
Indexed BySCIE ; SSCI
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaLinguistics ; Neurosciences & Neurology ; Psychology
WOS SubjectLinguistics ; Neurosciences ; Psychology, Experimental
WOS IDWOS:000571396200014
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85088905184
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Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionFaculty of Health Sciences
Corresponding AuthorHu, Weiping
Affiliation1.MOE Key Laboratory of Modern Teaching Technology, Shaanxi Normal University, China
2.Collaborative Innovation Center of Assessment Toward Basic Education Quality at Beijing Normal University, China
3.Faculty of Health Sciences University of Macau, China
4.State University of New York at Albany, United States
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Ji, Haojie,Qi, Senqing,Xu, Shiyang,et al. The role of animacy in metaphor processing of Mandarin Chinese: An Event-Related Potential (ERP) study[J]. Journal of Neurolinguistics, 2020, 56(100915).
APA Ji, Haojie., Qi, Senqing., Xu, Shiyang., Chen, Jinxin., Dai, David Yun., Li, Yadan., & Hu, Weiping (2020). The role of animacy in metaphor processing of Mandarin Chinese: An Event-Related Potential (ERP) study. Journal of Neurolinguistics, 56(100915).
MLA Ji, Haojie,et al."The role of animacy in metaphor processing of Mandarin Chinese: An Event-Related Potential (ERP) study".Journal of Neurolinguistics 56.100915(2020).
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