نتایج جستجو برای: garden path sentence

تعداد نتایج: 185292  

2013
Timothy J. Slattery Patrick Sturt Kiel Christianson Masaya Yoshida Fernanda Ferreira

Recent work has suggested that readers’ initial and incorrect interpretation of temporarily ambiguous (‘‘garden path’’) sentences (e.g., Christianson, Hollingworth, Halliwell, & Ferreira, 2001) sometimes lingers even after attempts at reanalysis. These lingering effects have been attributed to incomplete reanalysis. In two eye tracking experiments, we distinguish between two types of incomplete...

Journal: :The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology 2002
Simon P Liversedge Kevin B Paterson Emma L Clayes

We report an eye movement experiment investigating the influence of the focus operator only on syntactic processing of "long" relative clause sentences. Paterson, Liversedge, and Underwood (1999) found that readers were garden pathed by "short" reduced relative clause sentences containing the focus operator only. They argued that due to thematic differences between "short" and "long" relative c...

Journal: :Memory & cognition 2002
Enrique Meseguer Manuel Carreiras Charles Clifton

In an eye movement experiment, we examined the use of reanalysis strategies during the reading of locally ambiguous but globally unambiguous Spanish sentences. Among other measures, we examined regressive eye movements made while readers were recovering in reading mild garden path sentences. The sentences had an adverbial clause that, depending on the mood (indicative vs. subjunctive) of the su...

Journal: :Journal of cognitive neuroscience 1998
J M Hopf J Bayer M Bader M Meng

In an ERP study, German sentences were investigated that contain a case-ambiguous NP that may be assigned accusative or dative case. Sentences were disambiguated by the verb in final position of the sentence. As our data show, sentences ending in a verb that assigns dative case to the ambiguous NP elicit a clear garden-path effect. The garden-path effect was indicated by a broad centro-posterio...

2015
Frank van der Velde Marc de Kamps

We discuss and illustrate Neural Blackboard Architectures (NBAs) as the basis for variable binding and combinatorial processing the brain. We focus on the NBA for sentence structure. NBAs are based on the notion that conceptual representations are in situ, hence cannot be copied or transported. Novel combinatorial structures can be formed with these representations by embedding them in NBAs. We...

2006
Whitney Tabor

Two phenomena in sentence processing, the difficulty associated with garden path sentences and the difficulty associated with center embeddings, have generally been ascribed to different features of the parsing mechanism. For example, garden path phenomena are claimed to stem from biases (possibly structural, lexical, discourse, etc.) that cause the parser to favor a parse that eventually turns...

Journal: :Journal of cognitive neuroscience 2011
Hyekyung Hwang Karsten Steinhauer

In spoken language comprehension, syntactic parsing decisions interact with prosodic phrasing, which is directly affected by phrase length. Here we used ERPs to examine whether a similar effect holds for the on-line processing of written sentences during silent reading, as suggested by theories of "implicit prosody." Ambiguous Korean sentence beginnings with two distinct interpretations were ma...

Journal: :Quarterly journal of experimental psychology 2016
Svetlana Malyutina Dirk-Bart den Ouden

Previous research has shown that comprehenders do not always conduct a full (re)analysis of temporarily ambiguous "garden-path" sentences. The present study used a sentence-picture matching task to investigate what kind of representations are formed when full reanalysis is not performed: Do comprehenders "blend" two incompatible representations as a result of shallow syntactic processing or do ...

Journal: :Language, cognition and neuroscience 2021

Previous studies have reported that temporarily ambiguous sentences sometimes cause reading disruption (garden-path effects). These interpreted their finding as indicating the human sentence processing device (the processor) initially assigns incorrect structures and subsequently attempts revision. That is a logical interpretation. However, no previous demonstrated evidence of causal relationsh...

2002
Lee Osterhout Phillip J. Holcomb

Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded from 13 scalp electrodes while subjects listened to sentences containing syntactic ambiguities. Words that were inconsistent with the "preferred" sentence structure elicited a positive-going wave (the P600 effect), similar to that elicited by such words during reading (Osterhout & Holcomb, 1992). These results suggest that (1) ERPs recorded du...

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