Constrained Structure of Ancient Chinese Poetry Facilitates Speech Content Grouping

  • Xiangbin Teng
  • , Min Ma
  • , Jinbiao Yang
  • , Stefan Blohm
  • , Qing Cai
  • , Xing Tian*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ancient Chinese poetry is constituted by structured language that deviates from ordinary language usage [1, 2]; its poetic genres impose unique combinatory constraints on linguistic elements [3]. How does the constrained poetic structure facilitate speech segmentation when common linguistic [4–8] and statistical cues [5, 9] are unreliable to listeners in poems? We generated artificial Jueju, which arguably has the most constrained structure in ancient Chinese poetry, and presented each poem twice as an isochronous sequence of syllables to native Mandarin speakers while conducting magnetoencephalography (MEG) recording. We found that listeners deployed their prior knowledge of Jueju to build the line structure and to establish the conceptual flow of Jueju. Unprecedentedly, we found a phase precession phenomenon indicating predictive processes of speech segmentation—the neural phase advanced faster after listeners acquired knowledge of incoming speech. The statistical co-occurrence of monosyllabic words in Jueju negatively correlated with speech segmentation, which provides an alternative perspective on how statistical cues facilitate speech segmentation. Our findings suggest that constrained poetic structures serve as a temporal map for listeners to group speech contents and to predict incoming speech signals. Listeners can parse speech streams by using not only grammatical and statistical cues but also their prior knowledge of the form of language. Video Abstract: [Figure presented] Teng et al. combine recurrent neural network and neurophysiology to investigate how the structured format of poetry aids speech perception. The structured poetic format renders poems predictable across multiple timescales and facilitates speech segmentation. Phase precession indicating predictive processes in speech segmentation is observed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1299-1305.e7
JournalCurrent Biology
Volume30
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 6 Apr 2020

Keywords

  • artificial intelligence
  • brain rhythms
  • empirical aesthetics
  • integration
  • natural language processing
  • neural oscillations and entrainment
  • neural phase precession
  • prediction
  • speech
  • time windows and constants

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