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The bigger your pupils, the better my comprehension: An ERP study of how pupil size and gaze of the speaker affect syntactic processing.

Jiménez-Ortega LauraMaría Casado-PalaciosMiguel RubianesMario Martínez-MejiasPilar CasadoSabela FondevilaDavid Hernández-GutiérrezFrancisco MuñozJosé Sánchez-GarcíaManuel Martín-Loeches
Published in: Social cognitive and affective neuroscience (2024)
Gaze direction and pupil dilation play a critical role in communication and social interaction due to their ability to redirect and capture our attention and relevance for emotional information. The present study aimed to explore whether the pupil size and the gaze direction of the speaker affect language comprehension. Participants listened to sentences that could be correct or contain a syntactic anomaly, while the static face of a speaker was manipulated in terms of gaze direction (direct, averted) and pupil size (mydriasis, miosis). Left anterior negativity (LAN) and P600 linguistic ERP components were observed to syntactic anomalies for all conditions. The speaker's gaze did not impact syntactic comprehension. However, the amplitude of the LAN component for mydriasis (dilated pupil) was larger than for miosis (constricted pupil) condition. Larger pupils are generally associated with care, trust, interest, and attention, which might facilitate syntactic processing at early automatic stages. The result also supports the permeable and context-dependent nature of syntax. Previous studies also support an automatic nature of syntax (fast and efficient), which combined with the permeability to relevant sources of communicative information, such as pupil size and emotions, is highly adaptive for language comprehension and social interaction.
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