Anticipating Upcoming Words in Discourse: Evidence From ERPs and Reading Times.

University of Amsterdam

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The authors examined whether people can use their knowledge of the wider discourse rapidly enough to anticipate specific upcoming words as a sentence is unfolding. In an event-related brain potential (ERP) experiment, subjects heard Dutch stories that supported the prediction of a specific noun. To probe whether this noun was anticipated at a preceding indefinite article, stories were continued with a gender-marked adjective whose suffix mismatched the upcoming noun's syntactic gender. Prediction-inconsistent adjectives elicited a differential ERP effect, which disappeared in a no-discourse control experiment. Furthermore, in self-paced reading, prediction-inconsistent adjectives slowed readers down before the…

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938
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7.40
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100%
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Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Noun
  • Adjective
  • Linguistics
  • Suffix
  • Psychology
  • Reading (process)
  • Sentence
  • Noun phrase
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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