Scalar Inferencing, Polarity and Cognitive Load

Paul Marty, Jacopo Romoli, Yasutada Sudo, Bob van Tiel, R. Breheny
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Abstract

According to the Polarity Hypothesis, the presence or absence of a processing cost for Scalar Inferences (SIs) depends on their polarity. This hypothesis predicts, among other things, that the processing of lower-bounding SIs should not be affected by cognitive load the same way upper-bounding SIs are. To date, evidence in support of this prediction comes from the comparison between upper-bounding and lower-bounding SIs elicited by disparate scalar words. In this paper, we report on two dual-task experiments testing this prediction in a more controlled way by comparing upper-bounding and lower-bounding SIs arising from the same scalar words or scale-mates operating over the same dimension. Results show that, for these more minimal comparisons, lower-bounding SIs involve comparable cognitive demands as their upper-bounding counterparts. These findings challenge the idea that load effects are consistently modulated by SI polarity and suggest instead that these effects are relatively consistent across different types of SIs.
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标量推理、极性和认知负荷
根据极性假说(Polarity Hypothesis),标量推断(SIs)的处理成本的有无取决于其极性。该假说预测,除其他外,下界推理的处理过程不应像上界推理那样受到认知负荷的影响。迄今为止,支持这一预测的证据来自于对不同标量词引起的上界 SI 和下界 SI 的比较。在本文中,我们报告了两个双任务实验,通过比较由相同标量词或在相同维度上操作的标量同伴引起的上界和下界 SI,以一种更可控的方式测试了这一预测。结果表明,在这些更小的比较中,下边界 SI 与上边界 SI 所涉及的认知需求相当。这些研究结果对负荷效应始终受SI极性调节的观点提出了质疑,并表明这些效应在不同类型的SI中是相对一致的。
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