Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen.
ILCC, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh.
Cogn Sci. 2022 Feb;46(2):e13092. doi: 10.1111/cogs.13092.
Linguistic predictions may be generated from and evaluated against a representation of events and referents described in the discourse. Compatible with this idea, recent work shows that predictions about novel noun phrases include their definiteness. In the current follow-up study, we ask whether people engage similar prediction-related processes for definite and indefinite referents. This question is relevant for linguistic theories that imply a processing difference between definite and indefinite noun phrases, typically because definiteness is thought to require a uniquely identifiable referent in the discourse. We addressed this question in an event-related potential (ERP) study (N = 48) with preregistration of data acquisition, preprocessing, and Bayesian analysis. Participants read Dutch mini-stories with a definite or indefinite novel noun phrase (e.g., "het/een huis," the/a house), wherein (in)definiteness of the article was either expected or unexpected and the noun was always strongly expected. Unexpected articles elicited enhanced N400s, but unexpectedly indefinite articles also elicited a positive ERP effect at frontal channels compared to expectedly indefinite articles. We tentatively link this effect to an antiuniqueness violation, which may force people to introduce a new referent over and above the already anticipated one. Interestingly, expectedly definite nouns elicited larger N400s than unexpectedly definite nouns (replicating a previous surprising finding) and indefinite nouns. Although the exact nature of these noun effects remains unknown, expectedly definite nouns may have triggered the strongest semantic activation because they alone refer to specific and concrete referents. In sum, results from both the articles and nouns clearly demonstrate that definiteness marking has a rapid effect on processing, counter to recent claims regarding definiteness processing.
语言预测可以从话语中描述的事件和参照对象的表示中生成,并对其进行评估。与这个想法一致,最近的研究表明,对新名词短语的预测包括其限定性。在当前的后续研究中,我们询问人们是否对确定的和不定的指称对象进行类似的预测相关处理。这个问题对于那些暗示确定的和不定的名词短语在处理上存在差异的语言理论具有相关性,通常因为确定的名词短语被认为需要在话语中唯一可识别的指称对象。我们在一项事件相关电位(ERP)研究(N=48)中解决了这个问题,该研究对数据采集、预处理和贝叶斯分析进行了预先注册。参与者阅读带有确定的或不定的新名词短语的荷兰语微型故事(例如,“het/een huis”,the/a house),其中冠词的确定或不定性是预期的或未预期的,名词总是强烈预期的。未预期的冠词会引起增强的 N400,但与预期不定冠词相比,未预期的不定冠词也会在额部通道引起正的 ERP 效应。我们暂时将此效应与反独特性违反联系起来,这可能迫使人们引入一个新的指称对象,而不仅仅是已经预期的那个。有趣的是,预期的定冠词名词引起的 N400 比未预期的定冠词名词(复制了之前令人惊讶的发现)和不定冠词名词更大。尽管这些名词效应的确切性质尚不清楚,但预期的定冠词名词可能引发了最强的语义激活,因为它们仅指特定的和具体的指称对象。总之,冠词和名词的结果都清楚地表明,定冠词的标记对处理有快速的影响,与最近关于定冠词处理的说法相矛盾。