Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: doi:10.22028/D291-46367
Title: On the limits of LLM surprisal as a functional explanation of the N400 and P600
Author(s): Krieger, Benedict
Brouwer, Harm
Aurnhammer, Christoph
Crocker, Matthew W.
Language: English
Title: Brain Research
Volume: 1865
Publisher/Platform: Elsevier
Year of Publication: 2025
Free key words: Large language models
N400
P600
Event-related potentials
Human language comprehension
Psycholinguistics
DDC notations: 400 Language, linguistics
Publikation type: Journal Article
Abstract: Expectations about upcoming words play a central role in language comprehension, with expected words being processed more easily than less expected ones. Surprisal theory formalizes this relationship by positing that cognitive effort is proportional to a word’s negative log-probability in context, as determined by distributional, linguistic, and world knowledge constraints. The emergence of large language models (LLMs) demonstrating the capacity to compute richly contextualized surprisal estimates, has motivated their consideration as models of comprehension. We assess here the relationship of LLM surprisal with two key neural correlates of comprehension – the N400 and the P600 – which differ in sensitivity to semantic association and contextual expectancy. While prior work has focused on the N400, we propose that the P600 may offer a better index of surprisal, as it is unaffected by association while still patterning continuously with expectancy. Using regression-based ERPs (rERPs), we examine data from three German factorial studies to evaluate the extent to which LLM surprisal can account for ERP differences. Our results show that LLM surprisal captures neither component consistently. We find that it is contaminated by simple association, particularly in smaller LLMs. As a result, LLM surprisal can partially account for association-driven N400 effects, but not for the full attenuation of N400 effects. Correspondingly, this property of LLMs compromises their ability to model the P600, which is sensitive to expectancy but not to association.
DOI of the first publication: 10.1016/j.brainres.2025.149841
URL of the first publication: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2025.149841
Link to this record: urn:nbn:de:bsz:291--ds-463673
hdl:20.500.11880/40628
http://dx.doi.org/10.22028/D291-46367
ISSN: 0006-8993
Date of registration: 30-Sep-2025
Faculty: P - Philosophische Fakultät
Department: P - Sprachwissenschaft und Sprachtechnologie
Professorship: P - Prof. Dr. Matthew W. Crocker
Collections:SciDok - Der Wissenschaftsserver der Universität des Saarlandes

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