Causal role of frontocentral beta oscillation in comprehending linguistic communicative functions

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Abstract

Linguistic communication is often considered as an action serving the function of conveying the speaker’s goal to the addressee. Although neuroimaging studies have suggested a role of the motor system in comprehending communicative functions, the underlying mechanism is yet to be specified. Here, by 2 EEG experiments and a tACS experiment, we demonstrate that the frontocentral beta oscillation, which represents action states, plays a crucial part in linguistic communication understanding. Participants read scripts involving 2 interlocutors and rated the interlocutors’ attitudes. Each script included a critical sentence said by the speaker expressing a context-dependent function of either promise, request, or reply to the addressee’s query. These functions were behaviorally discriminated, with higher addressee’s will rating for the promise than for the reply and higher speaker’s will rating for the request than for the reply. EEG multivariate analyses showed that different communicative functions were represented by different patterns of frontocentral beta activity but not by patterns of alpha activity. Further tACS results showed that, relative to alpha tACS and sham stimulation, beta tACS improved the predictability of communicative functions of request or reply, as measured by the speaker’s will rating. These results convergently suggest a causal role of the frontocentral beta activities in comprehending linguistic communications. Highlights The frontocentral beta activity patterns discriminate communicative functions. The frontocentral beta activity plays a causal role in comprehending the functions. The comprehension could be subserved by the mental simulation of the communication. Our findings connect the idea of embedded semantics with the speech act theory.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00