Abstract
A lexical decision paradigm was used to examine syntactic influence on word recognition in sentences. Initial fragments of sentences were presented visually (CRT display) one word at a time (at reading speeds), from left to right. The string terminated with the appearance of a lexical decision target. The grammatical structure of the incomplete sentence affected lexical decision reaction time (RT). In Experiment 1, modal verb contexts followed by main verb targets and preposition contexts followed by noun targets produced lower RTs than did the opposite pairings (i.e., modal/noun and preposition/verb). In Experiment 2, transitive verb contexts followed by noun targets and subject noun phrase contexts followed by verb targets yielded lower RTs than did the opposite pairings. Similar contrasts for adjective targets did not yield comparable effects in Experiment 2, but did when the adjective was the head of a predictable phrase (Experiment 4). In Experiment 3, noun targets yielded lower RTs than did verb targets after contexts of a transitive verb followed by a prepositional phrase. An account of these effects is offered in terms of parsing constraints on phrasal categories.
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This research was conducted while the first author was supported by an NSF graduate fellowship and an NIMH training grant; experimental support was also contributed by the MIT Center for Cognitive Science under a grant from the Sloan Foundation Particular Sciences program. The experiments reported are part of the doctoral dissertation of the first author.
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Wright, B., Garrett, M. Lexical decision in sentences: Effects of syntactic structure. Memory & Cognition 12, 31–45 (1984). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03196995
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03196995