Abstract

Recently obtained data from interdisciplinary research has expanded our knowledge on the relationship between language and the brain considerably. Numerous aspects of language have been the subject of research. Visual word recognition is a temporal process which starts with recognizing the physical features of words and matching them with potential candidates in the mental lexicon. Word frequency plays a significant role in this process. Other factors are the similarities in spelling and pronunciation, and whether words have meanings or are simply letter strings. The emotional load of the words is another factor that deserves a closer inspection as an overwhelming amount of evidence supports the privileged status of emotions both in verbal and nonverbal tasks. It is well-established that lexical processing is handled by the involvement of the brain hemispheres to varying degrees, and that the left hemisphere has greater involvement in verbal tasks as compared to the right hemisphere. Also, the emotional load of the verbal stimuli affects the specialized roles of the brain hemispheres in lexical processing.
 Despite the abundance of research on processing of words that belong to languages from a variety of language families, the number of studies that investigated Turkish, a language of Uralic-Altaic origin, is scarce. This study aims to fill the gap in the literature by reporting evidence on how Turkish words with and without emotional load are processed and represented in the brain. We employed a visual hemifield paradigm and a lexical decision task. The participants were instructed to decide if the letter strings presented either from the right or the left of the computer screen were real words or non-words. Their response times and accuracy of their answers were recorded. We obtained shorter response times and higher accuracy rates for real words than non-words as reported in the majority of studies in the literature. We also found that the emotional load modulated the recognition of words, supporting the results in the literature. Finally, our results are in line with the view of left hemispheric superiority in lexical processing in monolingual speakers.

Highlights

  • With the emergence of cognitive science, there has been great interest in how monolingual speakers process language in the brain

  • When we look at the accuracy rates for words presented to the right visual field (RVF) and left visual field (LVF), no statistically significant difference was found

  • The present study aimed to investigate visual word recognition in Turkish and its brain organization

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Summary

Introduction

With the emergence of cognitive science, there has been great interest in how monolingual speakers process language in the brain. An enormous amount of data from a variety of language families exist in the literature. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, there are very few studies that investigated Turkish language from. The existing literature generally focuses on language pathology (Sadiyeva, 2004; Maviş & Özbabalık, 2006; Toğram, Çıkan & Duru, 2013; Ulusoy & Kuruoğlu, 2013), language learning and acquisition (Haznedar, 2007; Dolgunsöz & Sarıçoban, 2016; Tok & Yıgın, 2013; Sarıca, 2014; Özge, Marinis & Zeyrek, 2015) and bilingualism (Belet, 2009; Çeltek, 2014; Mergen & Kuruoğlu, 2016; 2017). This study aimed to fill this gap in the literature by investigating lexical processing in Turkish, how emotional workload affect lexical processing of Turkish words and their hemispheric organization

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