An event-related potential (ERP) study demonstrated that construction-based pragmatic constraints in Chinese (e.g., … that constrains a low-likelihood event and is similar to in English) can rapidly influence sentence comprehension and the mismatch of such constraints would lead to increased neural activity on the mismatching word. Here we examine to what extent readers' eye movements can instantly reveal the difficulties of mismatching constraints when participants read sentences with the structure + + + + + + . By embedding high-likelihood or neutral events in the construction, we created incongruent and underspecified sentences and compared such sentences with congruent ones describing events of low expectedness. Relative to congruent sentences, the VP region of incongruent sentences showed no significant differences on first-pass reading time measures, but the total fixation duration was reliably longer. Moreover, readers made more regressions from the VP and the sentence-final region to previous regions in the incongruent than the congruent condition. These findings suggest that the effect of pragmatic constraints is observable during naturalistic sentence reading, reflecting the activation of the construction-based pragmatic information for the late integration of linguistic and extra-linguistic information at sentential level.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02211 | DOI Listing |
Front Psychol
October 2019
School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China.
An event-related potential (ERP) study demonstrated that construction-based pragmatic constraints in Chinese (e.g., … that constrains a low-likelihood event and is similar to in English) can rapidly influence sentence comprehension and the mismatch of such constraints would lead to increased neural activity on the mismatching word.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychologia
August 2013
Center for Brain and Cognitive Sciences and Department of Psychology, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China.
A linguistic construction is typically viewed as encoding the pairing of syntactic form and semantic information that is independent of the meaning of constituent words. Here with the event-related potentials (ERPs) we demonstrate that such a construction can also encode pragmatic constraints (event likelihood) that immediately influence online sentence comprehension and the associated neural activity. The lian…dou…construction in Chinese (similar to even in English) normally describes an event of low expectedness (a semantic constraint); it also introduces a pragmatic scale implying that any event with a higher likelihood than the event described must occur (pragmatic inference).
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