Abstract
Neural oscillations are thought to support speech and language processing. They may not only inherit acoustic rhythms, but might also impose endogenous rhythms onto processing. In support of this, we here report that human (both male and female) eye movements during naturalistic reading exhibit rhythmic patterns that show frequency-selective coherence with the EEG, in the absence of any stimulation rhythm. Periodicity was observed in two distinct frequency bands: First, word-locked saccades at 4-5 Hz display coherence with whole-head theta-band activity. Second, fixation durations fluctuate rhythmically at ∼1 Hz, in coherence with occipital delta-band activity. This latter effect was additionally phase-locked to sentence endings, suggesting a relationship with the formation of multi-word chunks. Together, eye movements during reading contain rhythmic patterns that occur in synchrony with oscillatory brain activity. This suggests that linguistic processing imposes preferred processing time scales onto reading, largely independent of actual physical rhythms in the stimulus. © 2023 Henke et al.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 4461-4469 |
| Journal | The Journal of Neuroscience |
| Volume | 43 |
| Issue number | 24 |
| Online published | 19 May 2023 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 14 Jun 2023 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Research Keywords
- chunking
- delta-band
- eye movements
- neural oscillations
- reading
- theta-band
Publisher's Copyright Statement
- This full text is made available under CC-BY 4.0. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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