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Sentence Comprehension and Memory

Sentence Comprehension and Memory. Psycholinguistics – 5 th Meeting. We are usually not aware of the sentence structure when we comprehend it. Some sentences are too difficult in meaning that we have to struggle hard to comprehend. Some sentences are clearer in meaning than in intent.

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Sentence Comprehension and Memory

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  1. Sentence Comprehension and Memory Psycholinguistics – 5th Meeting

  2. We are usually not aware of the sentence structure when we comprehend it. • Some sentences are too difficult in meaning that we have to struggle hard to comprehend. • Some sentences are clearer in meaning than in intent. • We seldom remember the exact wording of the sentence we heard. • Factors involved in the sentence comprehension process: syntactic, semantic and pragmatic.

  3. Main Points • Parsing is the process of assigning elements of surface structure to linguistic categories. Because of limitations in processing resources, we begin to parse sentences as we see or hear each word in a sentence. • We use syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic knowledge to comprehend sentences. • Figurative language is that literally means one thing but is taken to mean another. Although we may sometimes use literal meaning as a guide to figurative meaning, we can also comprehend figurative language directly.

  4. Immediate Process of Sentences: Parsing • Parsing • Assign elements of its surface structure to linguistic categories. • Results in phrase marker (a tree structure; Fig. 6.1) S S S S S S S NP NP NP NP NP VP VP VP det det det det det N N N N V V V NP NP The The The The The actor actor actor actor thanked thanked thanked det det N the the audience Fig. 6.1 Five Stages in the parsing of a sentence.

  5. Two approaches of parsing: 1. Immediacy principle: when we first see or hear a word, we access its meaning from permanent memory, identify its likely referent, ad fit it into the syntactic structure of the sentence. 2. Wait-and-see approach: postpone interpreting a word or phrase until it is clearer.

  6. Parsing: Immediacy Principle • As we encounter a word in a sentence, we immediately make decisions about where to place the word into the phrase marker, although we sometimes postpone decisions (Just and Carpenter, 1980). • Otherwise, the number of decisions involved in understanding even a sentence can overload our cognitive resources. • (1) John bought the flower for Susan. • ‘for’ = ‘to give to’ or not? • If it’s heard, ‘flower’ has the other interpretation ‘flour’. • Immediate processing may lead to errors in parsing. • (2) The florist sent the flowers ... • At this point ‘sent the flowers’ looks like the main verb phrase. • (3) The florist sent the flowers was very pleased. • ‘Sent the flowers’ is an embedded relative clause. • We are surprised by the continuation in (3).

  7. Parsing: Immediacy Principle • We seem to use the immediacy approach more often because: 1. decisions in understanding can overload our cognitive resources. 2. we are often surprised by unexpected fragments in the sentence.

  8. Parsing Strategies (1): Late Closure Strategy • Attaching new items to the current constituent (Frazier, 1987; Frazier & Fodor, 1978; Kimball, 1973). • (5) Tom said that Bill had taken the cleaning out yesterday. • We tend to prefer attaching ‘yesterday’ to the main clause ‘Tom said …’ than to the subsequent subordinate clause ‘Bill had taken …’. • (6) Jessie put the book Kathy was reading in the library … • We tend to prefer attaching ‘in the library’ to the latter verb ‘reading’. • The burden on working memory is reduced. • Frazier and Rayner (1982) • (7) Since jay always jogs a mile seems like a very short distance to him. • Eye fixation times on the last few words were longer than onthe earlier ones. • This implies that the readers had misinterpreted ‘a mile’ and had to make some later adjustments. – garden path sentence (Ch. 1)

  9. Parsing Strategies (2): Minimal Attachment Strategy • Using the fewest syntactic nodes in the phrase marker (Frazier, 1987; Frazier & Fodor, 1978) • (8) Ernie kissed Marcie and her sister … • We prefer to interpret ‘her sister’ as a recipient of a kiss, rather than as the beginning of a new noun phrase. • Frazier and Rayner (1982) • (9) The city council argued the mayor’s position forcefully. (10) The city council argued the mayor’s position was incorrect. • Reading times were faster for (9) than for (10) (Fig. 6.2). S NP VP S V NP adv The city council argued the mayor’s position forcefully. NP VP S Fig. 6.2 Tree diagrams (b) (a) V NP VP The city council argued the mayor’s position was incorrect.

  10. Modular versus Interactive Models • Modular Model: comprehension as a whole is the result of many different modules. • Each devoted to a particular aspect of comprehension. • Parsing is performed initially by a syntactic module not influenced by higher-order contextual variables. • Contextual factors influence comprehension at a later stage.

  11. Modular versus Interactive Models • Interactive model: syntax and semantics interact during the comprehension process. • For example, constraint-based model (MacDonald, 1994): We simultaneously use all available information in our initial parsing—syntactic, lexical, discourse, as well as nonlinguistic, contextual information

  12. Modularity vs Interactive Parsing Interactive support: 1. If you walk too near the runway, landing planes ARE/IS… 2. If you've been trained as a pilot, landing planes IS/ARE… Modular support: 3. The florist sent the flowers was very pleased. 4. The performer sent the flowers was very pleased.

  13. Rayner’s Test (1983) • Whether the plausibility of real-world events influenced the immediate parsing of sentences. • Methods: measured eye fixations on segments of these sentences • Findings: Clear garden path effects were found with both plausible and implausible sentences.

  14. Rayner’s Test • Examined structurally ambiguous sentences such as (11). • (11) The florist sent the flowers was very pleased. (12) The florist sent the flowers to the elderly widow. (13) The florist who was sent the flowers was very pleased. • The minimal attachment principle – ‘sent’ in (11) is the verb (MV), as in (12) • Parsing is unrelated to the plausibility of real-world events (Rayner, Carlson and Frazier, 1983) • (11) The florist sent the flowers was very pleased. (14) The performer sent the flowers was very pleased. • Garden path effects (eye fixation) with both plausible (14) and implausible (11) sentences.

  15. Sentence Comprehension Model 1. Parse the sentence 2. Look words up in mental lexicon as they are presented 3. Access meaning and grammatical categories (activating related nodes along the way) 4. Construct a syntactic representation [we use trees when we diagram them] 5. Sentence meaning is built up from the meaning of the component words and sentence structure

  16. Figurative language • George went through the roof. • Birds of a feather flock together. George got very angry. Those of similar taste congregate in groups.

  17. Types of figurative language

  18. Metaphor • Metaphors consist of three main parts; tenor, vehicle, and ground. Ex) Billboards are warts on the landscape Similarity Between tenor and vehicle

  19. Figurative language comprehension • Pragmatic Theory: we comprehend figurative language by considering the literal meaning, then rejecting it • Conceptual metaphor theory: we comprehend figurative language in terms of underlying conceptual metaphors. • Class inclusion theories: metaphors are class inclusion statements

  20. Grice's Maxims of Conversation 1. Quantity Be informative 2. Quality Be truthful 3. Relation Be relevant 4. Manner Be clear

  21. Speech Acts: Function and Form Speech Act Sentence Type Function Form assertions declarative questions interrogative orders imperative requests imperative

  22. Stage Model of the Interpretation of Indirect Speech Acts(Searle, 1975) 1. Listener extracts literal meaning. 2. Listener decides if the literal meaning is what was intended 3. If not, listener figures intent using context and communicative conventions

  23. Conceptual metaphor Theory • Metaphors are not creative expressions but rather instantiations of underlying conceptual metaphors. Ex) TIME IS MONEY. (You’re wasting your time, How do you spend your time?) LOVE IS A JOURNEY. (Look how far we’ve come, We’re spinning our wheels, We’ve hit a dead-end street)

  24. Class Inclusion Theory • Metaphors are class inclusion statements. Ex 1) The container held the apples ( = basket) The container held the cola. ( = glass or bottle) Instantiation Identifying a general term with a specific meaning

  25. Class Inclusion Theory • Metaphors also require a selective activation of information from the lexicon. • What do two sentences have in common? ex ) The pianist is a butcher. The surgeon is a butcher. Negative evaluation, gross incompetence

  26. Class Inclusion Theory • Evidence • Metaphors are nonreversible. Ex ) My job is a jail ( O ) . My jail is a job ( X ) • We understand metaphors much the way we understand literal speech - by retrieving information from the lexicon, selecting the part that is relevant, and identifying the relationship between the lexical representations that have been retrieved.

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