Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
925438 | Brain and Language | 2012 | 7 Pages |
In this research the role of the RH in the comprehension of speech acts (or illocutionary force) was examined. Two split-screen experiments were conducted in which participants made lexical decisions for lateralized targets after reading a brief conversation remark. On one-half of the trials the target word named the speech act performed with the preceding conversation remark; on the remaining trials the target did not name the speech act that the remark performed. In both experiments, lexical decisions were facilitated for targets representing the speech act performed with the prior utterance, but only when the target was presented to the left visual field (and hence initially processed by the RH) and not when presented to the right visual field. This effect occurred at both short (Experiment 1: 250 ms) and long (Experiment 2: 1000 ms) delays. The results demonstrate the critical role played by the RH in conversation processing.
► Few experiments have examined the role of the right hemisphere (RH) in pragmatic processing. ► The current research examined the role of the RH in the comprehension of speech acts. ► Participants made lexical decisions for lateralized targets after reading conversation remarks. ► Priming occurred for speech act targets presented to the LVF/RH but not the RVF/LH.