Literature DB >> 19965371

Eye movement evidence that readers maintain and act on uncertainty about past linguistic input.

Roger Levy1, Klinton Bicknell, Tim Slattery, Keith Rayner.   

Abstract

In prevailing approaches to human sentence comprehension, the outcome of the word recognition process is assumed to be a categorical representation with no residual uncertainty. Yet perception is inevitably uncertain, and a system making optimal use of available information might retain this uncertainty and interactively recruit grammatical analysis and subsequent perceptual input to help resolve it. To test for the possibility of such an interaction, we tracked readers' eye movements as they read sentences constructed to vary in (i) whether an early word had near neighbors of a different grammatical category, and (ii) how strongly another word further downstream cohered grammatically with these potential near neighbors. Eye movements indicated that readers maintain uncertain beliefs about previously read word identities, revise these beliefs on the basis of relative grammatical consistency with subsequent input, and use these changing beliefs to guide saccadic behavior in ways consistent with principles of rational probabilistic inference.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19965371      PMCID: PMC2795489          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0907664106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  20 in total

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4.  Expectation-based syntactic comprehension.

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5.  Word misperception, the neighbor frequency effect, and the role of sentence context: evidence from eye movements.

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Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 3.332

6.  Syntactic ambiguity resolution in discourse: modeling the effects of referential context and lexical frequency.

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7.  The TRACE model of speech perception.

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8.  Functional parallelism in spoken word-recognition.

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9.  Incremental interpretation at verbs: restricting the domain of subsequent reference.

Authors:  G T Altmann; Y Kamide
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10.  Optimal predictions in everyday cognition.

Authors:  Thomas L Griffiths; Joshua B Tenenbaum
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  42 in total

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2.  A real-time mechanism underlying lexical deficits in developmental language disorder: Between-word inhibition.

Authors:  Bob McMurray; Jamie Klein-Packard; J Bruce Tomblin
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3.  Lexical interference effects in sentence processing: evidence from the visual world paradigm and self-organizing models.

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4.  Balancing Effort and Information Transmission During Language Acquisition: Evidence From Word Order and Case Marking.

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Review 5.  Robust speech perception: recognize the familiar, generalize to the similar, and adapt to the novel.

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6.  Comprehenders model the nature of noise in the environment.

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Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2018-09-06

7.  What Are You Waiting For? Real-Time Integration of Cues for Fricatives Suggests Encapsulated Auditory Memory.

Authors:  Marcus E Galle; Jamie Klein-Packard; Kayleen Schreiber; Bob McMurray
Journal:  Cogn Sci       Date:  2019-01

8.  Task effects reveal cognitive flexibility responding to frequency and predictability: evidence from eye movements in reading and proofreading.

Authors:  Elizabeth R Schotter; Klinton Bicknell; Ian Howard; Roger Levy; Keith Rayner
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2014-01-14

9.  The influence of event-related knowledge on verb-argument processing in aphasia.

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Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2014-12-05       Impact factor: 3.139

10.  The utility of modeling word identification from visual input within models of eye movements in reading.

Authors:  Klinton Bicknell; Roger Levy
Journal:  Vis cogn       Date:  2012-05-23
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