The time course of plausibility effects on eye movements in reading:: Evidence from noun-noun compounds

被引:62
|
作者
Staub, Adrian
Rayner, Keith
Pollatsek, Alexander
Hyona, Jukka
Majewski, Helen
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Psychol, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
[2] Univ Turku, Dept Psychol, Turku, Finland
[3] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Linguist, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
关键词
language comprehension; eye movements; semantic processing;
D O I
10.1037/0278-7393.33.6.1162
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Readers' eye movements were monitored as they read sentences containing noun-noun compounds that varied in frequency (e.g., elevator mechanic, mountain lion). The left constituent of the compound was either plausible or implausible as a head noun at the point at which it appeared, whereas the compound as a whole was always plausible. When the head noun analysis of the left constituent was implausible, reading times on this word were inflated, beginning with the first fixation. This finding is consistent with previous demonstrations of very rapid effects of plausibility on eye movements. Compound frequency did not modulate the plausibility effect, and all disruption was resolved by the time readers' eyes moved to the next word. These findings suggest (contra Kennison, 2005) that the parser initially analyzes a singular noun as a head instead of a modifier. In addition, the findings confirm that the very rapid effect of plausibility on eye movements is not due to strategic factors, because in the present experiment, unlike in previous demonstrations, this effect appeared in sentences that were globally plausible.
引用
收藏
页码:1162 / 1169
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Effects of word spacing on children’s reading: Evidence from eye movements
    Sainan Li
    Yongsheng Wang
    Zebo Lan
    Xiaoyuan Yuan
    Li Zhang
    Guoli Yan
    [J]. Reading and Writing, 2022, 35 : 1019 - 1033
  • [32] Effects of adult aging on reading filtered text: evidence from eye movements
    Paterson, Kevin B.
    McGowan, Victoria A.
    Jordan, Timothy R.
    [J]. PEERJ, 2013, 1
  • [33] Number-of-Features Effects During Reading: Evidence From Eye Movements
    Cook, Anne E.
    Colbert-Getz, Jorie
    Kircher, John C.
    [J]. DISCOURSE PROCESSES, 2013, 50 (03) : 210 - 225
  • [34] Investigating effects of selectional restriction violations and plausibility violation severity on eye-movements in reading
    Tessa Warren
    Kerry McConnell
    [J]. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 2007, 14 : 770 - 775
  • [35] Gender Congruency Effects in Spanish: Behavioral Evidence from Noun Phrase Production
    Wu, Ruixue
    Schiller, Niels O.
    [J]. BRAIN SCIENCES, 2023, 13 (04)
  • [36] MULTIPLE LEXICAL CODES IN READING - EVIDENCE FROM EYE-MOVEMENTS, NAMING TIME, AND ORAL READING
    FOLK, JR
    MORRIS, RK
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 1995, 21 (06) : 1412 - 1429
  • [37] Influence of verb and noun bases on reading aloud derived nouns: evidence from children with good and poor reading skills
    Daniela Traficante
    Marco Marelli
    Claudio Luzzatti
    Cristina Burani
    [J]. Reading and Writing, 2014, 27 : 1303 - 1326
  • [38] The time course of lexical activation in Broca's aphasia: Evidence from eye movements
    Yee, E
    Blumstein, S
    Sedivy, J
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2000, : 120 - 120
  • [39] Influence of verb and noun bases on reading aloud derived nouns: evidence from children with good and poor reading skills
    Traficante, Daniela
    Marelli, Marco
    Luzzatti, Claudio
    Burani, Cristina
    [J]. READING AND WRITING, 2014, 27 (07) : 1303 - 1326
  • [40] The time course of contextual cohort effects in auditory processing of category-ambiguous words: MEG evidence for a single "clash" as noun or verb
    Gaston, Phoebe
    Marantz, Alec
    [J]. LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE, 2018, 33 (04) : 402 - 423