3.8 Article

The effect of noun phrase type on working memory saturation during sentence comprehension

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 7, Pages 980-1000

Publisher

PSYCHOLOGY PRESS
DOI: 10.1080/09541440802469523

Keywords

Syntax; Working memory; Complexity; Recursion

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Double centre-embedded structures such as the rat the cat the boy chased ate was brown'' seem ungrammatical to many human subjects. Using an offline complexity judgement task, Gibson and Thomas (1999) demonstrated that people found such sentences no more difficult to understand when the second verb phrase (VP) was omitted, relative to a condition where all the required VPs were present. According to the Syntactic Prediction Locality Theory (SPLT; Gibson, 1998), this syntactic illusion is determined by the high working memory cost associated with the integration of the second VP. This cost could be reduced by replacing the third noun phrase (the boy) by a pronoun, making the reader more sensitive to the omission of the second VP. This hypothesis was tested in two experiments using French sentences. Both experiments confirmed the syntactic illusion when the second VP was not a pronoun. The second experiment measured the reading times of the VPs and showed that the pronoun induced a longer reading time of the final VP when the second VP was omitted. The overall results indicate a condition under which human subjects could process the most complex part of a sentence with more than one embedded relative clause. The overall results are consistent with most of the hypotheses derived from the SPLT although offline complexity judgements could not be the most sensitive measure to test some of these hypotheses.

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