心理与行为研究 ›› 2011, Vol. 9 ›› Issue (1): 53-64.

• 论文 • 上一篇    下一篇

Probabilistic Linguistic Expectations, Uncertain Input, and Implications for Eye Movements in Reading

Roger Levy   

  1. University of California, San Diego
  • 收稿日期:2010-11-27 出版日期:2011-03-20 发布日期:2011-03-20

Probabilistic Linguistic Expectations, Uncertain Input, and Implications for Eye Movements in Reading

Roger Levy   

  1. University of California, San Diego
  • Received:2010-11-27 Online:2011-03-20 Published:2011-03-20
  • Contact: Roger Levy, Department of Linguistics, University of California at San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive #0108, La Jolla, CA92093-0108, USA, rlevy@ucsd.edu
  • Supported by:
    This article is based on a talk given May 25, 2010, at the fourth China International Conference on Eye Movements at Tianjin Normal University, and I am grateful to feedback from the audience at that talk; All mistakes are my own; The writing of this article was supported by NSF CAREER grant 0953870 to Roger Levy

摘要: One nearly ubiquitous assumption in models of linguistic comprehension and of eye movement control in reading alike is of partial modularization between word-level and sentence-level processing: that the outcome of word recognition, and thus the input to sentence-level comprehension, is a categorial representation. Yet such a partial modularization throws away residual uncertainty regarding word identity that might potentially be of value to the comprehender further downstream in the sentence. Here I describe a line of research combining computational modeling with experimental eye-tracking work to explore the consequences of removing this partial modularity assumption.

Abstract: One nearly ubiquitous assumption in models of linguistic comprehension and of eye movement control in reading alike is of partial modularization between word-level and sentence-level processing: that the outcome of word recognition, and thus the input to sentence-level comprehension, is a categorial representation. Yet such a partial modularization throws away residual uncertainty regarding word identity that might potentially be of value to the comprehender further downstream in the sentence. Here I describe a line of research combining computational modeling with experimental eye-tracking work to explore the consequences of removing this partial modularity assumption.