Lexical prediction does not rationally adapt to prediction error: ERP evidence from pre-nominal articles

IF 2.9 1区 心理学 Q1 LINGUISTICS Journal of memory and language Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jml.2023.104435
Elise van Wonderen , Mante S. Nieuwland
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

People sometimes predict upcoming words during language comprehension, but debate remains on when and to what extent such predictions indeed occur. The rational adaptation hypothesis holds that predictions develop with expected utility: people predict more strongly when predictions are frequently confirmed (low prediction error) rather than disconfirmed. However, supporting evidence is mixed thus far and has only involved measuring responses to supposedly predicted nouns, not to preceding articles that may also be predicted. The current, large-sample (N = 200) ERP study on written discourse comprehension in Dutch therefore employs the well-known ‘pre-nominal prediction effect’: enhanced N400-like ERPs for articles that are unexpected given a likely upcoming noun’s gender (i.e., the neuter gender article ‘het’ when people expect the common gender noun phrase ‘de krant’, the newspaper) compared to expected articles. We investigated whether the pre-nominal prediction effect is larger when most of the presented stories contain predictable article-noun combinations (75% predictable, 25% unpredictable) compared to when most stories contain unpredictable combinations (25% predictable, 75% unpredictable). Our results show the pre-nominal prediction effect in both contexts, with little evidence to suggest that this effect depended on the percentage of predictable combinations. Moreover, the little evidence suggesting such a dependence was primarily observed for unexpected, neuter-gender articles (‘het’), which is inconsistent with the rational adaptation hypothesis. In line with recent demonstrations (Nieuwland, 2021a,b), our results suggest that linguistic prediction is less ‘rational’ or Bayes optimal than is often suggested.

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词汇预测不能合理地适应预测误差:来自名词前文章的ERP证据
人们有时会在语言理解过程中预测即将出现的单词,但关于这种预测何时以及在多大程度上确实发生的争论仍然存在。理性适应假说认为,预测随着预期效用的发展而发展:当预测经常被证实(预测误差低)而不是被否定时,人们的预测会更强烈。然而,到目前为止,支持证据是混杂的,并且只涉及测量对所谓的预测名词的反应,而不是对前面可能预测的冠词的反应。因此,目前对荷兰语书面话语理解的大样本(N = 200) ERP研究采用了众所周知的“名义前预测效应”:与预期的文章相比,对于可能即将到来的名词的性别(即,当人们期望常见的性别名词短语“de krant”时,中性文章“het”)意外的文章,N400-like ERP得到了增强。我们研究了当大多数故事包含可预测的冠词-名词组合(75%可预测,25%不可预测)时,与大多数故事包含不可预测组合(25%可预测,75%不可预测)时相比,是否名称前预测效应更大。我们的结果显示,在这两种情况下,名义前预测效应,几乎没有证据表明,这种影响取决于可预测组合的百分比。此外,很少有证据表明这种依赖主要是在意想不到的中性冠词(“het”)中观察到的,这与理性适应假说不一致。与最近的论证一致(Nieuwland, 2021a,b),我们的结果表明,语言预测不像通常认为的那样“理性”或贝叶斯最优。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
14.00%
发文量
49
审稿时长
12.7 weeks
期刊介绍: Articles in the Journal of Memory and Language contribute to the formulation of scientific issues and theories in the areas of memory, language comprehension and production, and cognitive processes. Special emphasis is given to research articles that provide new theoretical insights based on a carefully laid empirical foundation. The journal generally favors articles that provide multiple experiments. In addition, significant theoretical papers without new experimental findings may be published. The Journal of Memory and Language is a valuable tool for cognitive scientists, including psychologists, linguists, and others interested in memory and learning, language, reading, and speech. Research Areas include: • Topics that illuminate aspects of memory or language processing • Linguistics • Neuropsychology.
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