Verb aspect and the activation of event knowledge

被引:113
作者
Ferretti, Todd R.
Kutas, Marta
McRae, Ken
机构
[1] Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Dept Psychol, Ctr Cognit Neurosci, Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5, Canada
[2] Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Cognit Sci, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
[3] Univ Western Ontario, Dept Psychol, London, ON, Canada
关键词
verb aspect; event knowledge; semantic priming; sentence processing; ERP;
D O I
10.1037/0278-7393.33.1.182
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The authors show that verb aspect influences the activation of event knowledge with 4 novel results. First, common locations of events (e.g., arena) are primed following verbs with imperfective aspect (e.g., was skating) but not verbs with perfect aspect (e.g., had skated). Second, people generate more locative prepositional phrases as completions to sentence fragments with imperfective than those with perfect aspect. Third, the amplitude of the N400 component to location nouns varies as a function of aspect and typicality, being smallest for imperfective sentences with highly expected locations and largest for imperfective sentences with less expected locations. Fourth, the amplitude of a sustained frontal negativity spanning prepositional phrases is larger following perfect than following imperfective aspect. Taken together, these findings suggest a dynamic inter-play between event knowledge and the linguistic stream.
引用
收藏
页码:182 / 196
页数:15
相关论文
共 51 条
[11]   A rose by any other name: Long-term memory structure and sentence processing [J].
Federmeier, KD ;
Kutas, M .
JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 1999, 41 (04) :469-495
[12]   Picture the difference: electrophysiological investigations of picture processing in the two cerebral hemispheres [J].
Federmeier, KD ;
Kutas, M .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2002, 40 (07) :730-747
[13]   Integrating verbs, situation schemas, and thematic role concepts [J].
Ferretti, TR ;
McRae, K ;
Hatherell, A .
JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 2001, 44 (04) :516-547
[14]   Thematic role focusing by participle inflections: Evidence from conceptual combination [J].
Ferretti, TR ;
Gagne, CL ;
McRae, K .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2003, 29 (01) :118-127
[15]   The contributions of verb bias and plausibility to the comprehension of temporarily ambiguous sentences [J].
Garnsey, SM ;
Pearlmutter, NJ ;
Myers, E ;
Lotocky, MA .
JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 1997, 37 (01) :58-93
[16]  
Gentner D., 1975, Explorations in cognition, P211
[17]   THE GRAMMAR OF REFERENTIAL COHERENCE AS MENTAL PROCESSING INSTRUCTIONS [J].
GIVON, T .
LINGUISTICS, 1992, 30 (01) :5-55
[18]   Short-term semantic retention during on-line sentence comprehension. Brain potential evidence from filler-gap constructions [J].
Haarmann, HJ ;
Cameron, KA ;
Ruchkin, DS .
COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 2003, 15 (02) :178-190
[19]   Admitting that admitting verb sense into corpus analyses makes sense [J].
Hare, M ;
McRae, K ;
Elman, JL .
LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES, 2004, 19 (02) :181-224
[20]   Sense and structure: Meaning as a determinant of verb subcategorization preferences [J].
Hare, M ;
McRae, K ;
Elman, JL .
JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 2003, 48 (02) :281-303