Login / Signup

Time-course of phonetic (motor speech) encoding in utterance production.

Marina Laganaro
Published in: Cognitive neuropsychology (2023)
Speaking involves the preparation of the linguistic content of an utterance and of the motor programs leading to articulation. The temporal dynamics of linguistic versus motor-speech (phonetic) encoding is highly debated: phonetic encoding has been associated either to the last quarter of an utterance preparation time (∼150ms before articulation), or to virtually the entire planning time, simultaneously with linguistic encoding. We (i) review the evidence on the time-course of motor-speech encoding based on EEG/MEG event-related (ERP) studies and (ii) strive to replicate the early effects of phonological-phonetic factors in referential word production by reanalysing a large EEG/ERP dataset. The review indicates that motor-speech encoding is engaged during at least the last 300ms preceding articulation (about half of a word planning lag). By contrast, the very early involvement of phonological-phonetic factors could be replicated only partially and is not as robust as in the second half of the utterance planning time-window.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • mass spectrometry
  • resting state
  • multiple sclerosis
  • functional connectivity
  • ms ms
  • magnetic resonance
  • public health
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • high resolution
  • contrast enhanced
  • high density