Hoeks John C J, Stowe Laurie A, Doedens Gina
BCN NeuroImaging Centre, Behavioral and Cognitive Neurosciences, University of Groningen, P.O. Box 716, 9700 AS Groningen, The Netherlands.
Brain Res Cogn Brain Res. 2004 Mar;19(1):59-73. doi: 10.1016/j.cogbrainres.2003.10.022.
The ERP experiment reported here addresses some outstanding questions regarding word processing in sentential contexts: (1) Does only the 'message-level' representation (the representation of sentence meaning combining lexico-semantic and syntactic constraints) affect the processing of the incoming word [J. Exp. Psychol.: Learn. Mem. Cogn. 20 (1994) 92]? (2) Is lexically specified semantic relatedness between multiple words the primary factor instead [J. Exp. Psychol.: Learn. Mem. Cogn. 15 (1989) 791]? (3) Alternatively, do word and sentence level information interact during sentence comprehension? Volunteers read sentences (e.g. Dutch sentences resembling The javelin was by the athletes...) in which the (passive) syntactic structure and the semantic content of the lexical items together created a strong expectation of a specific final word (e.g., thrown), but also sentences in which the syntactic structure was changed from passive to active (e.g. Dutch sentences resembling The javelin has the athletes...), which altered the message level constraint substantially and strongly reduced the expectation of any particular completion. Half of the sentences ended in a final word with a good lexico-semantic fit relative to the preceding content words (e.g. thrown, fitting well with the preceding javelin and athletes). This creates very plausible sentences in the strong constraint context but semantically anomalous ones in the weakly constraining context (e.g., The javelin has the athletes thrown). In the other half the final word had a poor lexico-semantic fit (e.g., summarized that does not fit at all with javelin and athletes). Good lexico-semantic fit endings showed no difference in N400 amplitude in the strong and weak message-level constraint sentences, despite the fact that the latter were semantically anomalous. This result suggests that lexico-semantic fit can be more important for word processing than the meaning of the sentence as determined by the syntactic structure, at least initially. These conditions did differ, however, in the region of the P600 where the anomalous weak constraint version was much more positive, a pattern usually seen with ungrammatical sentences. The processing of poor lexico-semantic fit words showed a quite different pattern; in both strong and weak constraint sentences they elicited a substantial N400 effect, but N400-amplitude was significantly more negative following strong constraint contexts, even though both sentence contexts were equivalently anomalous. Taken together, these findings provide evidence for the importance of both message-level and lexico-semantic information during sentence comprehension. The implications for theories of sentence interpretation are discussed and an extension of the message-based hypothesis will be proposed.
本文所报告的事件相关电位(ERP)实验探讨了一些关于句子语境中词汇处理的突出问题:(1)是否只有“信息层面”的表征(结合词汇语义和句法限制的句子意义表征)会影响输入单词的处理[《实验心理学杂志:学习、记忆与认知》20(1994)92]?(2)多个单词之间词汇指定的语义相关性是否反而才是主要因素[《实验心理学杂志:学习、记忆与认知》15(1989)791]?(3)或者,在句子理解过程中,单词和句子层面的信息是否会相互作用?志愿者阅读句子(例如类似于“标枪被运动员……”的荷兰语句子),其中(被动)句法结构和词汇项的语义内容共同产生了对特定结尾单词(例如“投掷”)的强烈预期,但也阅读句法结构从被动变为主动的句子(例如类似于“标枪有运动员……”的荷兰语句子),这极大地改变了信息层面的限制,并大幅降低了对任何特定完成形式的预期。一半的句子以与前文内容单词在词汇语义上匹配良好的结尾单词结束(例如“投掷”,与前文的“标枪”和“运动员”匹配良好)。这在强限制语境中产生了非常合理的句子,但在弱限制语境中产生了语义异常的句子(例如“标枪有运动员投掷”)。在另一半句子中,结尾单词在词汇语义上匹配不佳(例如“总结”,与“标枪”和“运动员”完全不匹配)。尽管弱信息层面限制的句子在语义上是异常的,但词汇语义匹配良好的结尾在强信息层面限制句子和弱信息层面限制句子中的N400波幅没有差异。这一结果表明,至少在最初阶段,词汇语义匹配对于词汇处理可能比句法结构所决定的句子意义更重要。然而,在P600区域,这些条件确实存在差异,其中异常的弱限制版本更为正向,这种模式通常在不符合语法的句子中出现。词汇语义匹配不佳的单词的处理表现出截然不同的模式;在强限制和弱限制句子中,它们都引发了显著的N400效应,但在强限制语境之后,N400波幅显著更负,尽管两种句子语境在语义上同样异常。综合来看,这些发现为句子理解过程中信息层面和词汇语义信息的重要性提供了证据。文中讨论了这些发现对句子解释理论的影响,并将提出基于信息的假设的扩展。