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Word stress representations are language-specific: Evidence from event-related brain potentials
Authors:Ferenc Honbolygó  Andrea Kóbor  Borbála German  Valéria Csépe
Affiliation:1. Brain Imaging Centre, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Budapest, Hungary;2. Brain Imaging Centre, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

Department of Cognitive Science, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budapest, Hungary;3. Brain Imaging Centre, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

Faculty of Modern Philology and Social Sciences, University of Pannonia, Budapest, Hungary

Abstract:Understanding speech at the basic levels entails the simultaneous and independent processing of phonemic and prosodic features. While it is well-established that phoneme perception relies on language-specific long-term traces, it is unclear if the processing of prosodic features similarly involves language-specific representations. In the present study, we investigated the processing of a specific prosodic feature, word stress, using the method of event-related brain potentials (ERPs) employing a cross-linguistic approach. Hungarian participants heard disyllabic pseudowords stressed either on the first (legal stress) or on the second (illegal stress) syllable, pronounced either by a Hungarian or a German speaker. Results obtained using a data-driven ERP analysis methodology showed that all pseudowords in the deviant position elicited an Early Differentiating Negativity and a Mismatch Negativity component, except for the Hungarian pseudowords stressed on the first syllable. This suggests that Hungarian listeners did not process the native legal stress pattern as deviant, but the same stress pattern with a nonnative accent was processed as deviant. This implies that the processing of word stress was based on language-specific long-term memory traces.
Keywords:ERP  MMN  prosody  speech  word stress
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