Chomsky was right, researchers find:
We do have a ‘universal grammar’ in our head
BY NEW YORK
UNIVERSITY ON DECEMBER 7, 2015
A team of neuroscientists has found
new support for MIT linguist Noam Chomsky’s decades-old theory that we possess
an “internal grammar” that allows us to comprehend even nonsensical phrases.
“One of the foundational elements of
Chomsky’s work is that we have a grammar in our head, which underlies our
processing of language,” explains David Poeppel, the study’s senior researcher
and a professor in New York University’s Department of Psychology. “Our
neurophysiological findings support this theory: we make sense of strings of words
because our brains combine words into constituents in a hierarchical manner–a
process that reflects an ‘internal grammar’ mechanism.”
The research, which appears in the
latest issue of the journal Nature
Neuroscience, builds on Chomsky’s 1957 work, Syntactic
Structures (1957). It posited that we can recognize a phrase such as “Colorless
green ideas sleep furiously” as both nonsensical and grammatically correct
because we have an abstract knowledge base that allows us to make such distinctions
even though the statistical relations between words are non-existent.
Neuroscientists and psychologists
predominantly reject this viewpoint, contending that our comprehension does not
result from an internal grammar; rather, it is based on both statistical
calculations between words and sound cues to structure. That is, we know from
experience how sentences should be properly constructed–a reservoir of
information we employ upon hearing words and phrases. Many linguists, in
contrast, argue that hierarchical structure building is a central feature of
language processing.
In an effort to illuminate this
debate, the researchers explored whether and how linguistic units are
represented in the brain during speech comprehension.
To do so, Poeppel, who is also
director of the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics in Frankfurt, and
his colleagues conducted a series of experiments using magnetoencephalography
(MEG), which allows measurements of the tiny magnetic fields generated by brain
activity, and electrocorticography (ECoG), a clinical technique used to measure
brain activity in patients being monitored for neurosurgery.
The study’s subjects listened to
sentences in both English and Mandarin Chinese in which the hierarchical
structure between words, phrases, and sentences was dissociated from
intonational speech cues–the rise and fall of the voice–as well as statistical
word cues. The sentences were presented in an isochronous fashion–identical
timing between words–and participants listened to both predictable sentences
(e.g., “New York never sleeps,” “Coffee keeps me awake”), grammatically
correct, but less predictable sentences (e.g., “Pink toys hurt girls”), or word
lists (“eggs jelly pink awake”) and various other manipulated sequences.
The design allowed the researchers to
isolate how the brain concurrently tracks different levels of linguistic
abstraction–sequences of words (“furiously green sleep colorless”), phrases
(“sleep furiously” “green ideas”), or sentences (“Colorless green ideas sleep furiously”)–while
removing intonational speech cues and statistical word information, which many
say are necessary in building sentences.
Their results showed that the
subjects’ brains distinctly tracked three components of the phrases they heard,
reflecting a hierarchy in our neural processing of linguistic structures:
words, phrases, and then sentences–at the same time.
“Because we went to great lengths to
design experimental conditions that control for statistical or sound cue
contributions to processing, our findings show that we must use the grammar in
our head,” explains Poeppel. “Our brains lock onto every word before working to
comprehend phrases and sentences. The dynamics reveal that we undergo a
grammar-based construction in the processing of language.”
This is a controversial conclusion from the perspective of
current research, the researchers note, because the notion of abstract,
hierarchical, grammar-based structure building is rather unpopular.
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