Do readers misassign thematic roles? Evidence from a trailing boundary-change paradigm

被引:4
|
作者
Christianson, Kiel [1 ,2 ]
Dempsey, Jack [1 ]
Deshaies, Sarah-Elizabeth M. [1 ]
Tsiola, Anna [1 ]
Valderrama, Laura P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Coll Educ, 1310 S 6th St, Urbana, IL 61820 USA
[2] Beckman Inst, Adv Sci & Technol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Thematic-role reversal errors; noncanonical sentences; good-enough theory; eye tracking; language processing; GARDEN-PATH; WORKING-MEMORY; WORD-ORDER; COMPREHENSION; MISINTERPRETATION; COMPLEXITY; ANIMACY; SYNTAX; CUES; ERP;
D O I
10.1080/23273798.2023.2171071
中图分类号
R36 [病理学]; R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100104 ; 100213 ;
摘要
We report an eye-tracking experiment with a trailing boundary-change paradigm as people read subject- and object-relative clauses that were either plausible or implausible. We sought to determine whether readers sometime misassign thematic roles to arguments in implausible, noncanonical sentences. In some sentences, argument nouns were reversed after participants had read them. Thus, implausible noncanonical sentences like "The bird that the worm ate yesterday was small" changed to plausible "The worm that the bird ate was small." If initial processing generates veridical representations, all changes should disrupt rereading, irrespective of plausibility or syntactic structure. Misinterpretation effects should only arise in offline comprehension. If misassignment of thematic roles occurs during initial processing, differences should be apparent in first-pass reading times, and rereading should be differentially affected by the direction of the text change. Results provide evidence that readers sometimes misassign roles during initial processing and sometimes fail to revise misassignments during rereading.
引用
收藏
页码:872 / 892
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Processing Information During Regressions: An Application of the Reverse Boundary-Change Paradigm
    Sturt, Patrick
    Kwon, Nayoung
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 9
  • [2] Parafoveal processing of inflectional morphology in Russian: A within-word boundary-change paradigm
    Stoops, Anastasia
    Christianson, Kiel
    VISION RESEARCH, 2019, 158 : 1 - 10
  • [3] Readers and their roles: Evidence from readers of contemporary fiction in the Netherlands
    Riddell, Allen
    van Dalen-Oskam, Karina
    PLOS ONE, 2018, 13 (07):
  • [4] Anticipating Syntax During Reading: Evidence From the Boundary Change Paradigm
    Brothers, Trevor
    Traxler, Matthew J.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2016, 42 (12) : 1894 - 1906
  • [5] How broad are thematic roles? Evidence from structural priming
    Ziegler, Jayden
    Snedeker, Jesse
    COGNITION, 2018, 179 : 221 - 240
  • [6] Changing features do not guide attention in change detection: Evidence from a spatial cuing paradigm
    Stolz, JA
    Jolicceur, P
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2004, 11 (05) : 870 - 875
  • [7] Changing features do not guide attention in change detection: Evidence from a spatial cuing paradigm
    Jennifer A. Stolz
    Pierre Jolicoeur
    Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 2004, 11 : 870 - 875
  • [8] Phonology and orthography in deaf readers: Evidence from a lateralized ambiguity resolution paradigm
    Assor, Haim
    Miller, Paul
    Peleg, Orna
    Eviatar, Zohar
    LATERALITY, 2020, 25 (06): : 675 - 698
  • [9] Phonology and orthography in deaf readers: Evidence from a lateralized ambiguity resolution paradigm
    Assor, Haim
    Miller, Paul
    Peleg, Orna
    Eviatar, Zohar
    LATERALITY, 2020,
  • [10] On the Development of Parafoveal Preprocessing: Evidence from the Incremental Boundary Paradigm
    Marx, Christina
    Hutzler, Florian
    Schuster, Sarah
    Hawelka, Stefan
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 7