Negation and social avoidance in language recruits the right inferior frontal gyrus: a tDCS study
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Abstract
Introduction: In the process of comprehension, linguistic negation induces
inhibition of negated scenarios. Numerous studies have highlighted the role of
the right Inferior Frontal Gyrus (rIFG) - a key component of the inhibitory network
- in negation processing. Social avoidance can be linguistically portrayed using
attitudinal verbs such as “exclude” vs. “include”, which inherently carry negative
connotations. Consequently, we hypothesize that the interplay between explicit
negation and the implicit negativity of avoidance verbs can be modulated via
transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) targeting the rIFG.
Methods: In our study, sixty-four participants read approach/avoidance
sentences, which were either affirmative or negative, such as “Anne included
(did not include) meat in her diet” vs. “Anne excluded (did not exclude) meat in
her diet”. This reading task followed a 20-minute tDCS session. The sentences
were sequentially displayed, and at 1500 ms post-sentence, a verb was shown
– either the one previously mentioned or its semantic alternative counterpart
(e.g., included vs. excluded).
Results: Findings revealed that anodal stimulation intensifies the inhibitory
impact of negation during sentence comprehension. Under anodal conditions,
negative sentences led to extended reading times for the mentioned verbs
compared to their affirmative counterparts, suggesting an increased inhibitory
effect on the verb. Furthermore, in avoidance sentences, anodal stimulation
resulted in reduced reading times for alternative verbs (e.g. “included”) in
negative sentences compared to alternative verbs (e.g. “excluded”) in negated
approach sentences.
Discussion: As “avoidance” is semantically equivalent to “non-approach”,
the inhibitory effect of negation is primarily applied to the implicit negation:
NOT EXCLUDED = NOT→NOT (INCLUDED), which consequently activates the
representation of the alternative verb making it more available. We further discuss
these findings in light of the rIFG’s pivotal role in processing attitudinal verbs and
linguistic negation. This discussion is framed within the overarching context of
the two-step model of negation processing, highlighting its significance in the
realm of social communication.
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Bibliographic citation
García-Marco, E., Nuez Trujillo, A., Padrón, I., Ravelo, Y., Fu, Y., & Marrero, H. (2024). Negation and social avoidance in language recruits the right inferior frontal gyrus: a tDCS study. In Frontiers in Psychology (Vol. 15). Frontiers Media SA. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1356030







