Abstract

Local coherence effects arise when the human sentence processor is temporarily misled by a locally grammatical but globally ungrammatical analysis (The coach smiled at the player tossed a frisbee by the opposing team). It has been suggested that such effects occur either because sentence processing occurs in a bottom-up, self-organized manner rather than under constant grammatical supervision, or because local coherence can disrupt processing due to readers maintaining uncertainty about previous input. We report the results of an eye-tracking study in which subjects read German grammatical and ungrammatical sentences that either contained a locally coherent substring or not and gave binary grammaticality judgments. In our data, local coherence affected on-line processing immediately at the point of the manipulation. There was, however, no indication that local coherence led to illusions of grammaticality (a prediction of self-organization), and only weak, inconclusive support for local coherence leading to targeted regressions to critical context words (a prediction of the uncertain-input approach). We discuss implications for self-organized and noisy-channel models of local coherence.

Details

Title
Does Local Coherence Lead to Targeted Regressions and Illusions of Grammaticality?
Author
Paape, Dario  VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Vasishth, Shravan; Engbert, Ralf
Pages
42-58
Section
Report
Publication year
2021
Publication date
2021
Publisher
MIT Press Journals, The
e-ISSN
24702986
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2890975762
Copyright
© 2021. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.