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How odd: Diverging effects of predictability and plausibility violations on sentence reading and word memory

Katja I. Haeuser, Jutta Kray

2022Applied Psycholinguistics20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract How do violations of predictability and plausibility affect online language processing? How does it affect longer-term memory and learning when predictions are disconfirmed by plausible or implausible words? We investigated these questions using a self-paced sentence reading and noun recognition task. Critical sentences violated predictability or plausibility or both, for example, “Since Anne is afraid of spiders, she doesn’t like going down into the … basement (predictable, plausible), garden (unpredictable, somewhat plausible), moon (unpredictable, deeply implausible).” Results from sentence reading showed earlier-emerging effects of predictability violations on the critical noun, but later-emerging effects of plausibility violations after the noun. Recognition memory was exclusively enhanced for deeply implausible nouns. The earlier-emerging predictability effect indicates that having word form predictions disconfirmed is registered very early in the processing stream, irrespective of semantics. The later-emerging plausibility effect supports models that argue for a staged architecture of reading comprehension, where plausibility only affects a post-lexical integration stage. Our memory results suggest that, in order to facilitate memory and learning, a certain magnitude of prediction error is required.

Topics & Concepts

PredictabilityPsychologyReading (process)SentenceNounCognitive psychologySentence processingComprehensionLinguisticsAffect (linguistics)Word orderCommunicationPhysicsPhilosophyQuantum mechanicsNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismReading and Literacy DevelopmentTopic Modeling
How odd: Diverging effects of predictability and plausibility violations on sentence reading and word memory | Litcius