TY - JOUR T1 - Probabilistic language models in cognitive neuroscience: promises and pitfalls JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/168161 SP - 168161 AU - Kristijan Armeni AU - Roel M. Willems AU - Stefan Frank Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/07/25/168161.abstract N2 - Cognitive neuroscientists of language comprehension study how neural computations relate to cognitive computations during comprehension. On the cognitive part of the equation, it is important that the computations and processing complexity are explicitly defined. Probabilistic language models can be used to give a computationally explicit account of language complexity during comprehension. Whereas such models have so far predominantly been evaluated against behavioral data, only recently have the models been used to explain neurobiological signals. Measures obtained from these models emphasize the probabilistic, information-processing view of language understanding and provide a set of tools that can be used for testing neural hypotheses about language comprehension. Here, we provide a cursory review of the theoretical foundations and example neuroimaging studies employing probabilistic language models. We high-light the advantages and potential pitfalls of this approach and indicate avenues for future research. ER -