Anticipating Upcoming Words in Discourse: Evidence From ERPs and Reading Times.
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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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Authors
5Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Noun
- Adjective
- Linguistics
- Suffix
- Psychology
- Reading (process)
- Sentence
- Noun phrase
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Quality Education
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