Literature DB >> 8364532

Context effects in syntactic ambiguity resolution: discourse and semantic influences in parsing reduced relative clauses.

M J Spivey-Knowlton1, J C Trueswell, M K Tanenhaus.   

Abstract

This article examines how certain types of semantic and discourse context affect the processing of relative clauses which are temporarily ambiguous between a relative clause and a main clause (e.g., "The actress selected by the director ..."). We review recent results investigating local semantic context and temporal context, and we present some new data investigating referential contexts. The set of studies demonstrate that, contrary to many recent claims in the literature, all of these types of context can have early effects on syntactic, ambiguity resolution during on-line reading comprehension. These results are discussed within a "constraint-based" framework for ambiguity resolution in which effects of context are determined by the strength and relevance of the contextual constraint and by the availability of the syntactic alternatives.

Mesh:

Year:  1993        PMID: 8364532     DOI: 10.1037/h0078826

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Exp Psychol        ISSN: 1196-1961


  16 in total

1.  Understanding and producing the reduced relative construction: Evidence from ratings, editing and corpora.

Authors:  Mary Hare; Michael K Tanenhaus; Ken McRae
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 3.059

2.  Use of Referential Discourse Contexts in L2 Offline and Online Sentence Processing.

Authors:  Pi-Lan Yang
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2016-10

3.  Individual differences in syntactic processing: Is there evidence for reader-text interactions?

Authors:  Ariel N James; Scott H Fraundorf; Eun-Kyung Lee; Duane G Watson
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2018-06-27       Impact factor: 3.059

Review 4.  Constraint satisfaction as a theory of sentence processing.

Authors:  L Frazier
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  1995-11

Review 5.  Eye movements as a window into real-time spoken language comprehension in natural contexts.

Authors:  K M Eberhard; M J Spivey-Knowlton; J C Sedivy; M K Tanenhaus
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  1995-11

Review 6.  Grounding the neurobiology of language in first principles: The necessity of non-language-centric explanations for language comprehension.

Authors:  Uri Hasson; Giovanna Egidi; Marco Marelli; Roel M Willems
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2018-07-24

7.  Verb biases are shaped through lifelong learning.

Authors:  Rachel A Ryskin; Zhenghan Qi; Melissa C Duff; Sarah Brown-Schmidt
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2016-10-20       Impact factor: 3.051

8.  Separate streams or probabilistic inference? What the N400 can tell us about the comprehension of events.

Authors:  Gina R Kuperberg
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2016-01-20       Impact factor: 2.331

9.  What do we mean by prediction in language comprehension?

Authors:  Gina R Kuperberg; T Florian Jaeger
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2015-11-13       Impact factor: 2.331

10.  Putting lexical constraints in context into the visual-world paradigm.

Authors:  Jared M Novick; Sharon L Thompson-Schill; John C Trueswell
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2008-02-14
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.