Journal of Neurolinguistics | 2019

Right hemisphere involvement for pun processing – Effects of idiom decomposition

 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract The present study investigated hemispheric processing of puns involving decomposable idioms (e.g. Old skiers never die, they just go downhill) and non-decomposable ones (e.g., Old cleaners never die, they just bite the dust) using a divided visual field paradigm. In two cross-modal priming experiments, participants listened to puns and made lexical decisions for targets presented either in the left or right visual fields. To investigate hemispheric asymmetries at different processing stages (early vs. late), the prime-target inter-stimulus interval was 0\u202fms in Experiment 1 and was increased to 750\u202fms in Experiment 2. The results from both experiments demonstrated a left hemisphere advantage for processing puns triggered by non-decomposable idioms; puns motivated by decomposable idioms were processed equally fast in both hemispheres, suggesting that this type of pun induced right hemisphere involvement and led to bilateral processing. We discuss the results in light of predictions derived from the ‘graded salience’ hypothesis and the ‘fine-coarse coding’ hypothesis and argue that the data are more consistent with the graded salience hypothesis.

Volume 51
Pages 165-183
DOI 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2019.02.002
Language English
Journal Journal of Neurolinguistics

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