Literature DB >> 18194051

Complement coercion is not modulated by competition: evidence from eye movements.

Steven Frisson1, Brian McElree.   

Abstract

An eye-movement study examined the processing of expressions requiring complement coercion (J. Pustejovsky, 1995), in which a noun phrase that does not denote an event (e.g., the book) appears as the complement of an event-selecting verb (e.g., began the book). Previous studies demonstrated that these expressions are more costly to process than are control expressions that can be processed with basic compositional operations (L. Pylkkanen & B. McElree, 2006). Complement coercion is thought to be costly because comprehenders need to construct an event sense of the complement to satisfy the semantic restrictions of the verb (e.g., began writing the book). The reported experiment tests the alternative hypotheses that the cost arises from the need to select 1 interpretation from several or from competition between alternative interpretations. Expressions with weakly constrained interpretations (no dominant interpretation and several alternative interpretations) were not more costly to process than expressions with a strongly constrained interpretation (1 dominant interpretation and few alternative interpretations). These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the cost reflects the on-line construction of an event sense for the complement. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2008 APA, all rights reserved.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18194051     DOI: 10.1037/0278-7393.34.1.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn        ISSN: 0278-7393            Impact factor:   3.051


  11 in total

1.  Aspectual coercion in eye movements.

Authors:  David J Townsend
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2013-06

2.  Word category conversion causes processing costs: evidence from adjectival passives.

Authors:  Britta Stolterfoht; Helga Gese; Claudia Maienborn
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2010-10

3.  Complement Coercion: Distinguishing Between Type-Shifting and Pragmatic Inferencing.

Authors:  Argyro Katsika; David Braze; Ashwini Deo; Maria Mercedes Piñango
Journal:  Ment Lex       Date:  2012

4.  Complement Coercion in Mandarin Chinese: Evidence from a Self-paced Reading Study.

Authors:  Wenting Xue; Meichun Liu
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2020-11-18

5.  Eye-Tracking and Corpus-Based Analyses of Syntax-Semantics Interactions in Complement Coercion.

Authors:  Matthew W Lowder; Peter C Gordon
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2016-05-19       Impact factor: 2.331

6.  The difficult mountain: enriched composition in adjective-noun phrases.

Authors:  Steven Frisson; Martin J Pickering; Brian McElree
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2011-12

7.  It's hard to offend the college: effects of sentence structure on figurative-language processing.

Authors:  Matthew W Lowder; Peter C Gordon
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2013-02-18       Impact factor: 3.051

8.  The manuscript that we finished: structural separation reduces the cost of complement coercion.

Authors:  Matthew W Lowder; Peter C Gordon
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2014-07-07       Impact factor: 3.051

9.  Electrophysiological correlates of complement coercion.

Authors:  Gina R Kuperberg; Arim Choi; Neil Cohn; Martin Paczynski; Ray Jackendoff
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 3.225

10.  When events change their nature: the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying aspectual coercion.

Authors:  Martin Paczynski; Ray Jackendoff; Gina Kuperberg
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-04       Impact factor: 3.225

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