4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Eve movements and lexical access in spoken-language comprehension: Evaluating a linking hypothesis between fixations and linguistic processing

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 6, Pages 557-580

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1023/A:1026464108329

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Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD-27206] Funding Source: Medline

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A growing number of researchers in the sentence processing community are using eye movements to address issues in spoken language comprehension Experiments using this paradigm have shown that visually presented referential information, including properties of referents relevant to specific. actions, influences even the earliest moments of syntactic processing. Methodological concerns about task-specific strategies and the linking hypothesis between eye movements and linguistic processing are identified and discussed. These concerns are addressed in a review of recent studies of spoken word recognition which introduce and evaluate a derailed linking hypothesis between eye movements and lexical access. The results provide evidence about the time course of lexical activation that resolves some important theoretical issues in spoken-word recognition. They? also demonstrate that fixations are sensitive to properties of the normal language-processing system that cannot be attributed to task-specific strategies.

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