The present electroencephalographic (EEG) study was designed to investigate the perception of Mandarin neutral tone (T0) by adult Mandarin speakers. For this purpose, we examined the event-related brain potential (ERP) correlates of T0 processing in two-character Mandarin compounds. Eighteen native Mandarin speakers were tested using a modified oddball paradigm. Sixty strong-strong and 60 strong-weak (T0) disyllabic Mandarin compounds were selected from the Contemporary Chinese Dictionary. Participants performed one explicit task of stress discrimination (i.e., deciding whether the fourth word in sequences of 4 spoken words had the same stress pattern as the previous words or a different one) and one implicit task of passive listening. Behaviorally, accuracy showed that Mandarin listeners were able to correctly discriminate T0 from the canonical strong-strong stress pattern in 87.2% of cases. Neurophysiologically, larger N200 and P200 were observed for the infrequent strong-weak stress pattern compared to the canonical strong-strong one. Critically, a N325 was replicated in Mandarin, with a larger N325 for strong-weak than for strong-strong compounds. Consistently with a previous interpretation proposed by Böcker et al. (1999) for Dutch, we argue that the N325 might be a manifestation of the extraction of stress pattern in Mandarin also. Taken together, the present data on T0 perception in Mandarin are discussed in the context of the Prosody-Assisted-Processing (PAP) model (Isel et al., 2003), a cognitive model of spoken compound processing based on stress-timed languages, which postulates an early involvement of prosody in order to guide the morphological analysis at the lexical level.
Keywords: Compound; EEG Oddball; Mandarin; N325; Neutral tone; PAP model.
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