Transposing two words in a sentence (e.g. “cat” and “was” in “the white cat was big”) creates a sequence that is harder to classify as ungrammatical than control sequences (e.g. “the white was cat slowly”), suggesting that word position coding is noisy and can be affected by syntactic expectations. In the present research, this transposed-word effect was examined more closely using Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (RSVP) formats which provided either clear temporal cues to word order but no spatial cues, or both types of cues. Compared to when all words were presented simultaneously, the two RSVP formats reduced the transposed-word effect to the same degree while having no parallel impact on another ungrammatical comparison condition involving no transposition. These results are discussed in the context of serial and parallel models of reading as well as models that propose a later processing stage for the locus of the transposed-word effect.
Spinelli, G., Yang, H., Lupker, S. (2024). Rapid Serial Visual Presentation of transposed-word sequences in the grammatical decision task: an examination of the roles of temporal and spatial cues to word order. LANGUAGE, COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE, 39(6), 773-792 [10.1080/23273798.2024.2360168].
Rapid Serial Visual Presentation of transposed-word sequences in the grammatical decision task: an examination of the roles of temporal and spatial cues to word order
Spinelli, Giacomo;
2024
Abstract
Transposing two words in a sentence (e.g. “cat” and “was” in “the white cat was big”) creates a sequence that is harder to classify as ungrammatical than control sequences (e.g. “the white was cat slowly”), suggesting that word position coding is noisy and can be affected by syntactic expectations. In the present research, this transposed-word effect was examined more closely using Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (RSVP) formats which provided either clear temporal cues to word order but no spatial cues, or both types of cues. Compared to when all words were presented simultaneously, the two RSVP formats reduced the transposed-word effect to the same degree while having no parallel impact on another ungrammatical comparison condition involving no transposition. These results are discussed in the context of serial and parallel models of reading as well as models that propose a later processing stage for the locus of the transposed-word effect.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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