Global context effects on processing lexically ambiguous words: Evidence from eye fixations

被引:0
|
作者
Gretchen Kambe
Keith Rayner
Susan A. Duffy
机构
[1] University of Massachusetts,Department of Psychology
来源
Memory & Cognition | 2001年 / 29卷
关键词
Target Word; Global Context; Ambiguous Word; Target Sentence; Control Word;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Readers' eye movements were monitored as they read biased ambiguous target words in the context of a short paragraph. Two aspects of context were manipulated. The global context was presented in the topic sentence of the paragraph and instantiated either the dominant or the subordinate meaning of biased ambiguous target words (those with highly dominant meanings). Local contextual information either preceded or followed the target word and was always consistent with the subordinate interpretation. Consistent with prior research, we obtained a subordinate bias effect wherein readers looked longer at the ambiguous words than control words when the preceding context instantiated the subordinate meaning. More importantly, the magnitude of the subordinate bias effect was the same when global context alone, local context alone, or local and global context combined were consistent with the subordinate meaning of the ambiguous word. The results of this study indicate that global contextual information (1) has an immediate impact on lexical ambiguity resolution when no local disambiguating information is available, (2) has no additional effect when it is consistent with local information, but (3) does have a slightly delayed effect when inconsistent with local information.
引用
收藏
页码:363 / 372
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Word length effects on novel words: Evidence from eye movements
    Randy Lowell
    Robin K. Morris
    Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2014, 76 : 179 - 189
  • [42] On the processing of meaning from parafoveal vision during eye fixations in reading
    Rayner, K
    White, SJ
    Kambe, G
    Miller, B
    Liversedge, SP
    MIND'S EYE: COGNITIVE AND APPLIED ASPECTS OF EYE MOVEMENT RESEARCH, 2003, : 213 - 234
  • [43] Saccadic context indicates information processing within visual fixations: Evidence from event-related potentials and eye-movements analysis of the distractor effect
    Graupner, Sven-Thomas
    Pannasch, Sebastian
    Velichkovsky, Boris M.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2011, 80 (01) : 54 - 62
  • [44] CONSTRAINTS ON THE RANGE OF CONTEXT-INDEPENDENT PRIMING FROM AMBIGUOUS WORDS
    WILLIAMS, JN
    COLOMBO, L
    PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG, 1995, 58 (01): : 38 - 50
  • [45] Working memory and inferences: Evidence from eye fixations during reading
    Calvo, MG
    MEMORY, 2001, 9 (4-6) : 365 - 381
  • [46] Activation of shape and semantic information during ambiguous homophone processing: eye tracking evidence from Hindi
    Mishra, Ramesh Kumar
    Singh, Siddharth
    COGNITIVE PROCESSING, 2014, 15 (04) : 451 - 465
  • [47] Activation of shape and semantic information during ambiguous homophone processing: eye tracking evidence from Hindi
    Ramesh Kumar Mishra
    Siddharth Singh
    Cognitive Processing, 2014, 15 : 451 - 465
  • [48] AUTOMATIC ACCESS OF THE MEANINGS OF AMBIGUOUS WORDS IN CONTEXT - SOME LIMITATIONS OF KNOWLEDGE-BASED PROCESSING
    SEIDENBERG, MS
    TANENHAUS, MK
    LEIMAN, JM
    BIENKOWSKI, M
    COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1982, 14 (04) : 489 - 537
  • [49] Effects of context and individual differences on the processing of taboo words
    Christianson, Kiel
    Zhou, Peiyun
    Palmer, Cassie
    Raizen, Adina
    ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA, 2017, 178 : 73 - 86
  • [50] Quantifying contextual effects in second language processing of phonolexically ambiguous and unambiguous words
    Chrabaszcz, Anna
    Gor, Kira
    APPLIED PSYCHOLINGUISTICS, 2017, 38 (04) : 909 - 942