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
  • [11] Overreliance on Thematic Knowledge in Semantic Dementia: Evidence From an Eye-Tracking Paradigm
    Merck, Catherine
    Noel, Audrey
    Jamet, Eric
    Robert, Maxime
    Salmon, Anne
    Belliard, Serge
    Kalenine, Solene
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 34 (03) : 331 - 349
  • [12] Investigating Thematic Roles through Implicit Learning: Evidence from Light Verb Constructions
    Wittenberg, Eva
    Khan, Manizeh
    Snedeker, Jesse
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 8
  • [13] From central place to network model: Theory and evidence of a paradigm change
    Meijers, Evert
    TIJDSCHRIFT VOOR ECONOMISCHE EN SOCIALE GEOGRAFIE, 2007, 98 (02) : 245 - 259
  • [14] RENAL FAILURE AND MORTALITY: FROM EVIDENCE TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, CHANGE OF PARADIGM?
    Ibeas, Jose
    Macias, Edwar
    Rubiella, Carol
    Morell, Antoni
    Serrano, Javier
    Rodriguez-Jornet, Angel
    Vicario, Jose
    Rexachs, Dolores
    NEPHROLOGY DIALYSIS TRANSPLANTATION, 2019, 34
  • [15] Do emotional stimuli interfere with response inhibition? evidence from the antisaccade paradigm
    Hoffmann, Alexandra
    Buesel, Christian
    Ritter, Marcel
    Sachse, Pierre
    COGNITION & EMOTION, 2021,
  • [16] Do emotional stimuli interfere with response inhibition? evidence from the antisaccade paradigm
    Hoffmann, Alexandra
    Busel, Christian
    Ritter, Marcel
    Sachse, Pierre
    COGNITION & EMOTION, 2021, 35 (08) : 1626 - 1633
  • [17] Event Structures Drive Semantic Structural Priming, Not Thematic Roles: Evidence From Idioms and Light Verbs
    Ziegler, Jayden
    Snedeker, Jesse
    Wittenberg, Eva
    COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2018, 42 (08) : 2918 - 2949
  • [18] Mapping thematic roles onto grammatical functions in sentence production: evidence from structural priming in Italian
    Vernice, Mirta
    Hartsuiker, Robert J.
    JOURNAL OF CULTURAL COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2019, 3 (Suppl 1) : 39 - 64
  • [19] Mapping thematic roles onto grammatical functions in sentence production: evidence from structural priming in Italian
    Mirta Vernice
    Robert J. Hartsuiker
    Journal of Cultural Cognitive Science, 2019, 3 : 39 - 64
  • [20] Implicit processing of tactile information: Evidence from the tactile change detection paradigm
    Pritchett, David
    Gallace, Alberto
    Spence, Charles
    CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION, 2011, 20 (03) : 534 - 546