Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language

The current study combines artificial language learning with visual world eyetracking to investigate acquisition of representations associating spoken words and visual referents using morphologically complex pseudowords. Pseudowords were constructed to consistently encode referential gender by means...

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Main Authors: Anton Öttl, Dawn Marie Behne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01250/full
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spelling doaj-27c4c3ba179248e4bd5b3d24a5baca762020-11-24T22:02:17ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-08-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01250174777Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial languageAnton Öttl0Dawn Marie Behne1Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyNorwegian University of Science and TechnologyThe current study combines artificial language learning with visual world eyetracking to investigate acquisition of representations associating spoken words and visual referents using morphologically complex pseudowords. Pseudowords were constructed to consistently encode referential gender by means of suffixation for a set of imaginary figures that could be either male or female. During training, the frequency of exposure to pseudowords and their imaginary figure referents were manipulated such that a given word and its referent would be more likely to occur in either the masculine form or the feminine form, or both forms would be equally likely. Results show that these experience-based probabilities affect the formation of new representations to the extent that participants were faster at recognizing a referent whose gender was consistent with the induced expectation than a referent whose gender was inconsistent with this expectation. Disambiguating gender information available from the suffix did not mask the induced expectations. Eyetracking data provide additional evidence that such expectations surface during online lexical processing. Taken together, these findings indicate that experience-based information is accessible during the earliest stages of processing, and are consistent with the view that language comprehension depends on the activation of perceptual memory traces.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01250/fullMental Representationartificial languagegender representationsfrequencies of exposurevisual world eyetrackingexperience-based probabilitie
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anton Öttl
Dawn Marie Behne
spellingShingle Anton Öttl
Dawn Marie Behne
Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language
Frontiers in Psychology
Mental Representation
artificial language
gender representations
frequencies of exposure
visual world eyetracking
experience-based probabilitie
author_facet Anton Öttl
Dawn Marie Behne
author_sort Anton Öttl
title Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language
title_short Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language
title_full Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language
title_fullStr Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language
title_full_unstemmed Experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language
title_sort experience-based probabilities modulate expectations in a gender-coded artificial language
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-08-01
description The current study combines artificial language learning with visual world eyetracking to investigate acquisition of representations associating spoken words and visual referents using morphologically complex pseudowords. Pseudowords were constructed to consistently encode referential gender by means of suffixation for a set of imaginary figures that could be either male or female. During training, the frequency of exposure to pseudowords and their imaginary figure referents were manipulated such that a given word and its referent would be more likely to occur in either the masculine form or the feminine form, or both forms would be equally likely. Results show that these experience-based probabilities affect the formation of new representations to the extent that participants were faster at recognizing a referent whose gender was consistent with the induced expectation than a referent whose gender was inconsistent with this expectation. Disambiguating gender information available from the suffix did not mask the induced expectations. Eyetracking data provide additional evidence that such expectations surface during online lexical processing. Taken together, these findings indicate that experience-based information is accessible during the earliest stages of processing, and are consistent with the view that language comprehension depends on the activation of perceptual memory traces.
topic Mental Representation
artificial language
gender representations
frequencies of exposure
visual world eyetracking
experience-based probabilitie
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01250/full
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