id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-260092-pmufsvg9 Nieuwland, Mante S. Anticipating words during spoken discourse comprehension: A large-scale, pre-registered replication study using brain potentials() 2020-09-30 .txt text/plain 14919 682 50 For these reasons, researchers typically argue that evidence for lexical prediction is strongest when it is observed before the predicted noun is heard or read, and is obtained by comparing ERPs to words that themselves have little semantic meaning (e.g., the English articles 'a/an') and/or do not differ in meaning (e.g., the Dutch adjectives 'groot/grote', which have the same meaning but differ in the presence of the inflectional suffix '-e' to mark grammatical gender). In more recent studies on comprehension of written sentences, gender-mismatch on prenominal articles was associated with N400-like effects, i.e. an enhanced negativity in the typical N400 time window (Dutch: Fleur, Flecken, Rommers & Nieuwland, 2020; Otten & Van Berkum, 2009; Spanish: Foucart, Martin, Moreno & Costa, 2014; Martin, Branzi & Bar, 2018; Molinaro, Gianelle, Caffarra & Martin, 2014) , although sometimes with a time course or scalp distribution unlike the typical N400 effects elicited by nouns. ./cache/cord-260092-pmufsvg9.txt ./txt/cord-260092-pmufsvg9.txt