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Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners

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Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners. / Forgács, Bálint; Gervain, Judit; Parise, Eugenio et al.
In: Scientific Reports, Vol. 12, No. 1, 4866, 22.03.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Forgács, B, Gervain, J, Parise, E, Gergely, G, Elek, LP, Üllei-Kovács, Z & Király, I 2022, 'Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners', Scientific Reports, vol. 12, no. 1, 4866. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-08306-w

APA

Forgács, B., Gervain, J., Parise, E., Gergely, G., Elek, L. P., Üllei-Kovács, Z., & Király, I. (2022). Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners. Scientific Reports, 12(1), Article 4866. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-08306-w

Vancouver

Forgács B, Gervain J, Parise E, Gergely G, Elek LP, Üllei-Kovács Z et al. Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners. Scientific Reports. 2022 Mar 22;12(1):4866. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-08306-w

Author

Forgács, Bálint ; Gervain, Judit ; Parise, Eugenio et al. / Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners. In: Scientific Reports. 2022 ; Vol. 12, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{8b23e268db4d4bd68a303ee195252025,
title = "Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners",
abstract = "A recently discovered electrophysiological response, the social N400, suggests that we use our language system to track how social partners comprehend language. Listeners show an increased N400 response, when themselves not, only a communicative partner experiences a semantic incongruity. Does the N400 reflect purely semantic or mentalistic computations as well? Do we attribute language comprehension to communicative partners using our semantic systems? In five electrophysiological experiments we identified two subcomponents of the social N400. First, we manipulated the presence-absence of an Observer during object naming: the semantic memory system was activated by the presence of a social partner in addition to semantic predictions for the self. Next, we induced a false belief—and a consequent miscomprehension—in the Observer. Participants showed the social N400, over and above the social presence effect, to labels that were incongruent for the Observer, even though they were congruent for them. This effect appeared only if participants received explicit instructions to track the comprehension of the Observer. These findings suggest that the semantic systems of the brain are not merely sensitive to social information and contribute to the attribution of comprehension, but they appear to be mentalistic in nature.",
keywords = "Multidisciplinary",
author = "B{\'a}lint Forg{\'a}cs and Judit Gervain and Eugenio Parise and Gy{\"o}rgy Gergely and Elek, {L{\'i}via Priyanka} and Zsuzsanna {\"U}llei-Kov{\'a}cs and Ildik{\'o} Kir{\'a}ly",
year = "2022",
month = mar,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1038/s41598-022-08306-w",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "Scientific Reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "Nature Publishing Group",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Semantic systems are mentalistically activated for and by social partners

AU - Forgács, Bálint

AU - Gervain, Judit

AU - Parise, Eugenio

AU - Gergely, György

AU - Elek, Lívia Priyanka

AU - Üllei-Kovács, Zsuzsanna

AU - Király, Ildikó

PY - 2022/3/22

Y1 - 2022/3/22

N2 - A recently discovered electrophysiological response, the social N400, suggests that we use our language system to track how social partners comprehend language. Listeners show an increased N400 response, when themselves not, only a communicative partner experiences a semantic incongruity. Does the N400 reflect purely semantic or mentalistic computations as well? Do we attribute language comprehension to communicative partners using our semantic systems? In five electrophysiological experiments we identified two subcomponents of the social N400. First, we manipulated the presence-absence of an Observer during object naming: the semantic memory system was activated by the presence of a social partner in addition to semantic predictions for the self. Next, we induced a false belief—and a consequent miscomprehension—in the Observer. Participants showed the social N400, over and above the social presence effect, to labels that were incongruent for the Observer, even though they were congruent for them. This effect appeared only if participants received explicit instructions to track the comprehension of the Observer. These findings suggest that the semantic systems of the brain are not merely sensitive to social information and contribute to the attribution of comprehension, but they appear to be mentalistic in nature.

AB - A recently discovered electrophysiological response, the social N400, suggests that we use our language system to track how social partners comprehend language. Listeners show an increased N400 response, when themselves not, only a communicative partner experiences a semantic incongruity. Does the N400 reflect purely semantic or mentalistic computations as well? Do we attribute language comprehension to communicative partners using our semantic systems? In five electrophysiological experiments we identified two subcomponents of the social N400. First, we manipulated the presence-absence of an Observer during object naming: the semantic memory system was activated by the presence of a social partner in addition to semantic predictions for the self. Next, we induced a false belief—and a consequent miscomprehension—in the Observer. Participants showed the social N400, over and above the social presence effect, to labels that were incongruent for the Observer, even though they were congruent for them. This effect appeared only if participants received explicit instructions to track the comprehension of the Observer. These findings suggest that the semantic systems of the brain are not merely sensitive to social information and contribute to the attribution of comprehension, but they appear to be mentalistic in nature.

KW - Multidisciplinary

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-022-08306-w

DO - 10.1038/s41598-022-08306-w

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

IS - 1

M1 - 4866

ER -