Making psycholinguistics musical: Self-paced reading time evidence for shared processing of linguistic and musical syntax

被引:110
|
作者
Slevc, L. Robert [1 ]
Rosenberg, Jason C. [2 ]
Patel, Aniruddh D. [3 ]
机构
[1] Rice Univ, Dept Psychol, Houston, TX 77005 USA
[2] Univ Calif San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
[3] Inst Neurosci, La Jolla, CA USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
WORKING-MEMORY; LANGUAGE; PREFERENCE; ATTENTION; LYRICS; BRAIN;
D O I
10.3758/16.2.374
中图分类号
B841 [心理学研究方法];
学科分类号
040201 ;
摘要
Linguistic processing, especially syntactic processing, is often considered a hallmark of human cognition; thus, the domain specificity or domain generality of syntactic processing has attracted considerable debate. The present experiments address this issue by simultaneously manipulating syntactic processing demands in language and music. Participants performed self-paced reading of garden path sentences, in which structurally unexpected words cause temporary syntactic processing difficulty. A musical chord accompanied each sentence segment, with the resulting sequence forming a coherent chord progression. When structurally unexpected words were paired with harmonically unexpected chords, participants showed substantially enhanced garden path effects. No Such interaction was observed when the critical words violated semantic expectancy or when the critical chords violated timbral expectancy. These results support a prediction of the shared syntactic integration resource hypothesis (Patel, 2003), which suggests that music and language draw on a common pool of limited processing resources for integrating incoming elements into syntactic structures. Notations of the stimuli from this study may be downloaded from pbr.psychonomic-journals.org/content/supplemental.
引用
收藏
页码:374 / 381
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Sentence Processing in Spanish as a Heritage Language: A Self-Paced Reading Study of Relative Clause Attachment
    Jegerski, Jill
    LANGUAGE LEARNING, 2018, 68 (03) : 598 - 634
  • [42] Processing gender stereotypes in dementia patients and older healthy adults: a self-paced reading study
    Mueller-Feldmeth, Daniel
    Ahnefeld, Katharina
    Hanulikova, Adriana
    LINGUISTICS VANGUARD, 2019, 5
  • [43] Does self-paced exercise depend on executive processing? A narrative review of the current evidence
    Holgado, Darias
    Sanabria, Daniel
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF SPORT AND EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 14 (01) : 130 - 153
  • [44] Convergent Probabilistic Cues Do Not Trigger Syntactic Adaptation: Evidence From Self-Paced Reading
    Dempsey, Jack
    Liu, Qiawen
    Christianson, Kiel
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2020, 46 (10) : 1906 - 1921
  • [45] A self-paced reading (SPR) study of the effects of processing instruction on the L2 processing of active and passive sentences
    Lee, James F.
    Malovrh, Paul A.
    Doherty, Stephen
    Nichols, Alecia
    LANGUAGE TEACHING RESEARCH, 2022, 26 (06) : 1133 - 1157
  • [46] Unpacking L2 explicit linguistic knowledge and online processing of the English modals may and can: A comparison of acceptability judgments and self-paced reading
    Mifka-Profozic, Nadia
    O'Reilly, David
    Lovrovic, Leonarda
    STUDIES IN SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 2023,
  • [47] The role of retrieval during study: Evidence of reminding from self-paced study time
    Geoffrey L. McKinley
    Brian H. Ross
    Aaron S. Benjamin
    Memory & Cognition, 2019, 47 : 877 - 892
  • [48] The role of retrieval during study: Evidence of reminding from self-paced study time
    McKinley, Geoffrey L.
    Ross, Brian H.
    Benjamin, Aaron S.
    Francisco, San
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2019, 47 (05) : 877 - 892
  • [49] Verbal working memory and on-line syntactic processing: Evidence from self-paced listening
    Waters, GS
    Caplan, D
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY SECTION A-HUMAN EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2004, 57 (01): : 129 - 163
  • [50] Perception of time in music in Parkinson's disease - Processing of musical syntax compensates rhythmic deficits
    Bellinger, D.
    Altenmueller, E.
    Volkmann, J.
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2016, 31 : S464 - S465