School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Psychological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2024 Oct;77(10):2040-2064. doi: 10.1177/17470218231223858. Epub 2024 Jan 27.
Previous investigations of whether readers make predictions about the full identity of upcoming words have focused on the extent to which there are processing consequences when readers encounter linguistic input that is incompatible with their expectations. To date, eye-movement studies have revealed inconsistent evidence of the processing costs that would be expected to accompany lexical prediction. This study investigated whether readers' lexical predictions were observable during or downstream from their initial point of activation. Three experiments assessed readers' eye movements to predictable and unpredictable words, and then to subsequent downstream words, which probed the lingering activation of previously expected words. The results showed novel evidence of processing costs for unexpected input but only when supported by a plausible linguistic environment, suggesting that readers could strategically modulate their predictive processing. However, there was limited evidence that their lexical predictions affected downstream processing. The implications of these findings for understanding the role of prediction in language processing are discussed.
先前的研究主要集中在读者是否会对即将出现的单词的完整身份做出预测,以及当读者遇到与他们的预期不兼容的语言输入时,是否会产生处理后果。迄今为止,眼动研究已经揭示了与词汇预测相关的处理成本的不一致证据。本研究探讨了读者的词汇预测是否可以在初始激活期间或之后观察到。三个实验评估了读者对可预测和不可预测单词的眼动,然后对后续下游单词进行了评估,这些单词探测了先前预期单词的持续激活。结果表明,在有合理语言环境支持的情况下,新的证据表明对意外输入会产生处理成本,这表明读者可以策略性地调节他们的预测处理。然而,几乎没有证据表明他们的词汇预测会影响下游处理。这些发现对理解预测在语言处理中的作用具有重要意义。