Division of Neuroscience and Experimental Psychology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Manchester, UK.
Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK.
Cognition. 2018 Jul;176:248-254. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2018.03.017. Epub 2018 Mar 31.
The implicit prosody hypothesis (Fodor, 1998, 2002) proposes that silent reading coincides with a default, implicit form of prosody to facilitate sentence processing. Recent research demonstrated that a more vivid form of implicit prosody is mentally simulated during silent reading of direct speech quotations (e.g., Mary said, "This dress is beautiful"), with neural and behavioural consequences (e.g., Yao, Belin, & Scheepers, 2011; Yao & Scheepers, 2011). Here, we explored the relation between 'default' and 'simulated' implicit prosody in the context of relative-clause (RC) attachment in English. Apart from confirming a general low RC-attachment preference in both production (Experiment 1) and comprehension (Experiments 2 and 3), we found that during written sentence completion (Experiment 1) or when reading silently (Experiment 2), the low RC-attachment preference was reliably enhanced when the critical sentences were embedded in direct speech quotations as compared to indirect speech or narrative sentences. However, when reading aloud (Experiment 3), direct speech did not enhance the general low RC-attachment preference. The results from Experiments 1 and 2 suggest a quantitative boost to implicit prosody (via auditory perceptual simulation) during silent production/comprehension of direct speech. By contrast, when reading aloud (Experiment 3), prosody becomes equally salient across conditions due to its explicit nature; indirect speech and narrative sentences thus become as susceptible to prosody-induced syntactic biases as direct speech. The present findings suggest a shared cognitive basis between default implicit prosody and simulated implicit prosody, providing a new platform for studying the effects of implicit prosody on sentence processing.
隐含韵律假设(Fodor,1998,2002)提出,默读与一种默认的、隐含的韵律形式一致,以促进句子处理。最近的研究表明,在默读直接引语(例如,Mary said,"This dress is beautiful")时,会在心理上模拟出一种更生动的隐含韵律形式,这会带来神经和行为上的后果(例如,Yao、Belin 和 Scheepers,2011;Yao 和 Scheepers,2011)。在这里,我们在英语关系从句(RC)附着的背景下探讨了“默认”和“模拟”隐含韵律之间的关系。除了在生成(实验 1)和理解(实验 2 和 3)中确认了一般的低 RC 附着偏好外,我们还发现,在书面句子完成(实验 1)或默读(实验 2)期间,与间接引语或叙事句相比,当关键句子嵌入直接引语时,低 RC 附着偏好会可靠地增强。然而,当大声朗读(实验 3)时,直接引语并没有增强一般的低 RC 附着偏好。实验 1 和 2 的结果表明,在默读或口头生成直接引语时,隐含韵律会得到定量增强(通过听觉感知模拟)。相比之下,当大声朗读(实验 3)时,由于其明确的性质,韵律在所有条件下都变得同样明显;因此,间接引语和叙事句与直接引语一样容易受到韵律引起的句法偏差的影响。本研究结果表明,默认隐含韵律和模拟隐含韵律之间存在共同的认知基础,为研究隐含韵律对句子处理的影响提供了新的平台。