Spatial distance effects on incremental semantic interpretation of abstract sentences: Evidence from eye tracking

Guerra, E; Knoeferle, P

Abstract

A large body of evidence has shown that visual context information can rapidly modulate language comprehension for concrete sentences and when it is mediated by a referential or a lexical-semantic link. What has not yet been examined is whether visual context can also modulate comprehension of abstract sentences incrementally when it is neither referenced by, nor lexically associated with, the sentence. Three eye-tracking reading experiments examined the effects of spatial distance between words (Experiment 1) and objects (Experiment 2 and 3) on participants' reading times for sentences that convey similarity or difference between two abstract nouns (e.g., 'Peace and war are certainly different...'). Before reading the sentence, participants inspected a visual context with two playing cards that moved either far apart or close together. In Experiment 1, the cards turned and showed the first two nouns of the sentence (e.g., 'peace', 'war'). In Experiments 2 and 3, they turned but remained blank. Participants' reading times at the adjective (Experiment 1: first-pass reading time; Experiment 2: total times) and at the second noun phrase (Experiment 3: first-pass times) were faster for sentences that expressed similarity when the preceding words/objects were close together (vs. far apart) and for sentences that expressed dissimilarity when the preceding words/objects were far apart (vs. close together). Thus, spatial distance between words or entirely unrelated objects can rapidly and incrementally modulate the semantic interpretation of abstract sentences.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000345481300003 Not found in local WOS DB
Título según SCOPUS: Spatial distance effects on incremental semantic interpretation of abstract sentences: Evidence from eye tracking
Título de la Revista: COGNITION
Volumen: 133
Número: 3
Editorial: Elsevier
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 535
Página final: 552
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.cognition.2014.07.007

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS