Exploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language Comprehension

A language comprehension mechanism that immediately starts processing language as it is encountered is typically thought of as one that speeds and facilitates spoken language comprehension. However, there exist cases where the earliest parts of a word or phrase encode information that is somewhat at...

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Main Author: Tsang, Cara Kar Lee
Other Authors: Chambers, Craig
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34947
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-349472013-11-02T03:42:47ZExploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language ComprehensionTsang, Cara Kar Leepsycholinguisticsimpulsive processingsentence processingreal-time language comprehensionbottom-up activationinteraction0633A language comprehension mechanism that immediately starts processing language as it is encountered is typically thought of as one that speeds and facilitates spoken language comprehension. However, there exist cases where the earliest parts of a word or phrase encode information that is somewhat at odds with the remainder of the word or phrase in full. Examples of these "potentially misleading" cases include compound words where the initial subpart of the compound belongs to a different syntactic category than the entire compound (e.g., "popcorn", "greyhound"), or noun phrases where the initial element of the phrase signals perceptual properties possessed by the referent of the noun phrase (e.g., some Chinese Cantonese classifier-noun phrases). Using a visual-world methodology, this dissertation explores the kinds of unintended or "impulsive" activation that are triggered when listeners encounter such cases, as well as how syntactic and contextual cues can constraining this impulsive activation. Experiment 1 examines whether hearing compound subparts (e.g., "pop-" in "popcorn") activates conceptual associates across syntactic categories, and Experiment 2 examines whether this activation is moderated by listeners' expectations about the syntactic structure of the sentences they encounter. Experiments 3 and 4 investigate the processing of compounds whose initial subparts correspond to colour terms (e.g., "greyhound"). Experiment 3 explores whether these colour subparts trigger the activation of phrasal-level descriptions of non-target objects in the visual display, and whether this activation is influenced by the presence/absence of motivation to use colour descriptions when naming screen objects. Experiment 4 further explores whether a perceptual mismatch between a target object and the colour term in its name increases this impulsive activation. Finally, Experiment 5 investigates whether listeners use the perceptual information encoded in pre-nominal classifiers in Cantonese Chinese to guide their consideration of referential candidates whose perceptual properties do or do not match the classifier semantics. The findings from this dissertation point to the highly interactive nature of spoken language comprehension, suggesting that the kinds of impulsive activation under current discussion are rampant and automatic, but can also be suppressed to varying degrees by the syntactic, semantic, and contextual cues available to the listener.Chambers, Craig2012-112013-01-07T20:38:24ZNO_RESTRICTION2013-01-07T20:38:24Z2013-01-07Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/34947en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic psycholinguistics
impulsive processing
sentence processing
real-time language comprehension
bottom-up activation
interaction
0633
spellingShingle psycholinguistics
impulsive processing
sentence processing
real-time language comprehension
bottom-up activation
interaction
0633
Tsang, Cara Kar Lee
Exploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language Comprehension
description A language comprehension mechanism that immediately starts processing language as it is encountered is typically thought of as one that speeds and facilitates spoken language comprehension. However, there exist cases where the earliest parts of a word or phrase encode information that is somewhat at odds with the remainder of the word or phrase in full. Examples of these "potentially misleading" cases include compound words where the initial subpart of the compound belongs to a different syntactic category than the entire compound (e.g., "popcorn", "greyhound"), or noun phrases where the initial element of the phrase signals perceptual properties possessed by the referent of the noun phrase (e.g., some Chinese Cantonese classifier-noun phrases). Using a visual-world methodology, this dissertation explores the kinds of unintended or "impulsive" activation that are triggered when listeners encounter such cases, as well as how syntactic and contextual cues can constraining this impulsive activation. Experiment 1 examines whether hearing compound subparts (e.g., "pop-" in "popcorn") activates conceptual associates across syntactic categories, and Experiment 2 examines whether this activation is moderated by listeners' expectations about the syntactic structure of the sentences they encounter. Experiments 3 and 4 investigate the processing of compounds whose initial subparts correspond to colour terms (e.g., "greyhound"). Experiment 3 explores whether these colour subparts trigger the activation of phrasal-level descriptions of non-target objects in the visual display, and whether this activation is influenced by the presence/absence of motivation to use colour descriptions when naming screen objects. Experiment 4 further explores whether a perceptual mismatch between a target object and the colour term in its name increases this impulsive activation. Finally, Experiment 5 investigates whether listeners use the perceptual information encoded in pre-nominal classifiers in Cantonese Chinese to guide their consideration of referential candidates whose perceptual properties do or do not match the classifier semantics. The findings from this dissertation point to the highly interactive nature of spoken language comprehension, suggesting that the kinds of impulsive activation under current discussion are rampant and automatic, but can also be suppressed to varying degrees by the syntactic, semantic, and contextual cues available to the listener.
author2 Chambers, Craig
author_facet Chambers, Craig
Tsang, Cara Kar Lee
author Tsang, Cara Kar Lee
author_sort Tsang, Cara Kar Lee
title Exploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language Comprehension
title_short Exploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language Comprehension
title_full Exploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language Comprehension
title_fullStr Exploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language Comprehension
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Impulsive Activation During Spoken Language Comprehension
title_sort exploring impulsive activation during spoken language comprehension
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34947
work_keys_str_mv AT tsangcarakarlee exploringimpulsiveactivationduringspokenlanguagecomprehension
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