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Right hemisphere activation of joke-related information: an event-related brain potential study.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2005 Mar; 17(3):494-506.JC

Abstract

Two studies tested the hypothesis that the right hemisphere engages in relatively coarse semantic coding that aids high-level language tasks such as joke comprehension. Scalprecorded event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were collected as healthy adults read probe words (CRAZY) preceded either by jokes or nonfunny controls ("Everyone had so much fun jumping into the swimming pool, we decided to put in a little water/platform"). Probes were related to the meaning of the jokes, but not the controls. In Experiment 1a, with central presentation, probes following jokes (related) elicited less negative ERPs 300-700 msec postonset (N400) than did probes following nonfunny controls (unrelated). This finding suggests related probes were primed by the jokes. In addition, unrelated probes elicited a larger anterior positivity 700-900 msec than did related, as irrelevant stimuli impacted control processes invoked by task demands. In Experiment 1b, probes (CRAZY) were preceded only by sentence-final words from jokes (water) or controls (platform). No ERP effects were observed in Experiment 1b, suggesting the N400 priming effect and the anterior positivity observed in Experiment 1a ref lect semantic activations at the discourse level. To assess hemispheric differences in semantic activations, in Experiment 2, ERPs were recorded as participants read probe words presented in their left and right visual fields (LVF and RVF, respectively). Probes elicited a smaller N400 component when preceded by jokes than controls. This N400 priming effect was larger with presentation to the LVF, suggesting joke-relevant information was more active in the right hemisphere. The anterior positivity was observed with RVF but not LVF presentation, suggesting an important role for the left hemisphere in controlled retrieval in language comprehension.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Cognitive Science Department, University of California, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA. coulson@cogsci.ucsd.eduNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

15814008

Citation

Coulson, Seana, and Ying Choon Wu. "Right Hemisphere Activation of Joke-related Information: an Event-related Brain Potential Study." Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, vol. 17, no. 3, 2005, pp. 494-506.
Coulson S, Wu YC. Right hemisphere activation of joke-related information: an event-related brain potential study. J Cogn Neurosci. 2005;17(3):494-506.
Coulson, S., & Wu, Y. C. (2005). Right hemisphere activation of joke-related information: an event-related brain potential study. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 17(3), 494-506.
Coulson S, Wu YC. Right Hemisphere Activation of Joke-related Information: an Event-related Brain Potential Study. J Cogn Neurosci. 2005;17(3):494-506. PubMed PMID: 15814008.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Right hemisphere activation of joke-related information: an event-related brain potential study. AU - Coulson,Seana, AU - Wu,Ying Choon, PY - 2005/4/9/pubmed PY - 2005/5/28/medline PY - 2005/4/9/entrez SP - 494 EP - 506 JF - Journal of cognitive neuroscience JO - J Cogn Neurosci VL - 17 IS - 3 N2 - Two studies tested the hypothesis that the right hemisphere engages in relatively coarse semantic coding that aids high-level language tasks such as joke comprehension. Scalprecorded event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were collected as healthy adults read probe words (CRAZY) preceded either by jokes or nonfunny controls ("Everyone had so much fun jumping into the swimming pool, we decided to put in a little water/platform"). Probes were related to the meaning of the jokes, but not the controls. In Experiment 1a, with central presentation, probes following jokes (related) elicited less negative ERPs 300-700 msec postonset (N400) than did probes following nonfunny controls (unrelated). This finding suggests related probes were primed by the jokes. In addition, unrelated probes elicited a larger anterior positivity 700-900 msec than did related, as irrelevant stimuli impacted control processes invoked by task demands. In Experiment 1b, probes (CRAZY) were preceded only by sentence-final words from jokes (water) or controls (platform). No ERP effects were observed in Experiment 1b, suggesting the N400 priming effect and the anterior positivity observed in Experiment 1a ref lect semantic activations at the discourse level. To assess hemispheric differences in semantic activations, in Experiment 2, ERPs were recorded as participants read probe words presented in their left and right visual fields (LVF and RVF, respectively). Probes elicited a smaller N400 component when preceded by jokes than controls. This N400 priming effect was larger with presentation to the LVF, suggesting joke-relevant information was more active in the right hemisphere. The anterior positivity was observed with RVF but not LVF presentation, suggesting an important role for the left hemisphere in controlled retrieval in language comprehension. SN - 0898-929X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/15814008/Right_hemisphere_activation_of_joke_related_information:_an_event_related_brain_potential_study_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -