Effects of Global Discourse Coherence on Local Contextual Predictions

Georgia Carter
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Abstract

Context is vitally important for how we understand the world around us, and this is particularly so with language. We know that humans use a range of linguistic cues when understanding language to help tailor their expectations about upcoming linguistic material, contributing to the seamless nature of comprehension. Linguistic cues fall into two different levels of context – the local, sentence context and the wider, global context. Some linguistic cues that are considered to be global are knowledge about the world or the speaker. These have been found to facilitate semantic processing when they align with linguistic expectations through faster reading times of predictable content. One other global contextual cue that may be of use to how we represent meaning and understand the world around us is the coherence of a discourse. The current, pre-registered study investigates the interaction between discourse coherence and word predictability during language comprehension. To do so, we used an online, self-paced reading paradigm and had participants read three-sentence discourses that differed on the coherence of the final target sentence with the first two preamble sentences, and also on the predictability of a critical word within the target sentence. From our first experiment, we found that people were sensitive to the coherence of the overall three-sentence narrative, with slower reading times for trials that had less coherent preamble contexts. After exploration of our data, we pre-registered two further studies to investigate whether this effect is still present in more extreme experimental settings. For Experiment 2, we altered the ratio of less and more coherent contexts to see if people still make use of discourse coherence as a linguistic cue for informing their expectations when there was a greater proportion of more coherent trials. We found this to be the case. In Experiment 3, we replaced our less predictable critical words that were semantically relevant to the overall message of the target sentence with completely anomalous words. Here, we found people were faster to read the highly predictable critical words and slower to read the anomalous critical words when they first read more coherent contexts, but not when they first read less coherent contexts. This suggests that people are able to use relevant linguistic cues from both levels of context, and do so flexibly depending on the degree of contextual support at the global discourse level.     
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全局语篇连贯对局部语境预测的影响
语境对于我们如何理解周围的世界至关重要,对于语言来说尤其如此。我们知道,人类在理解语言时使用一系列语言线索来帮助调整他们对即将到来的语言材料的期望,从而促进理解的无缝本质。语言线索分为两种不同层次的语境——局部的句子语境和更广泛的全局语境。一些被认为是全球性的语言线索是关于世界或说话者的知识。研究发现,当他们通过更快地阅读可预测的内容,与语言预期保持一致时,这些词汇有助于语义处理。另一个可能对我们如何表达意义和理解周围世界有用的全球语境线索是话语的连贯性。当前的预注册研究探讨了语言理解过程中语篇连贯和词语可预测性之间的相互作用。为了做到这一点,我们使用了一个在线的、自定节奏的阅读范式,让参与者阅读三句话的话语,这些话语在最后的目标句子与前两个序言句子的连贯性以及目标句子中关键词的可预测性方面存在差异。从我们的第一个实验中,我们发现人们对整个三句话叙述的连贯性很敏感,在序言上下文不太连贯的情况下,阅读时间会变慢。在研究了我们的数据之后,我们预先登记了两项进一步的研究,以调查这种效应是否在更极端的实验环境中仍然存在。对于实验2,我们改变了不连贯和更连贯的语境的比例,看看当有更连贯的实验的比例更大时,人们是否仍然使用话语连贯作为告知他们期望的语言线索。我们发现情况就是这样。在实验3中,我们用完全异常的词取代了与目标句子的整体信息在语义上相关的不太可预测的关键词。在这里,我们发现,当人们第一次阅读更连贯的语境时,他们阅读高度可预测的批评词的速度更快,阅读异常批评词的速度更慢,但当他们第一次阅读不连贯的语境时,情况并非如此。这表明人们能够从语境的两个层面上使用相关的语言线索,并根据语境在全局话语层面上的支持程度灵活地使用。
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