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1 Evidence for imperfect adult performance Depth of processing in language comprehension: not noticing the evidence, A. J. Sanford and P. Sturt, Trends.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Evidence for imperfect adult performance Depth of processing in language comprehension: not noticing the evidence, A. J. Sanford and P. Sturt, Trends."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Evidence for imperfect adult performance Depth of processing in language comprehension: not noticing the evidence, A. J. Sanford and P. Sturt, Trends in Cognitive Sciences 6:382-386 (2002). Good-enough representations in language comprehension, F. Ferreira, K. G. D. Bailey, and V. Ferraro, Current Directions in Psychological Science 11:11-15 (2002). Constraints on sentence comprehension E. Gibson and N. Pearlmutter,, Trends in Cognitive Science 2:262-268 (1998).

2 2 How people compose the meanings of sentences from individual words The government has other agencies and instruments for pursuing these other objectives

3 3 The Good enough approach to language comprehension holds that language processing is sometimes only partial and that semantic representations are often incomplete Traditional theories assume that sentence processing is algorithmic and that meaning is derived compositionally But there is a new approach the argues with that. Good-enough representations in language comprehension

4 4 Depth of processing in language comprehension: not noticing the evidence  The time-course of processing  The depth of processing There are two factors to be consider while analyzing sentences:

5 5 Models of sentence processing  Garden-path model  Constraint-satisfaction model Example: “Mary saw the man with the binoculars”

6 6 While analyzing the sentence, not all the evidence are noticed. Thus the use of lexical semantics can be far from complete. To the question : “How many animals of each sort did Moses put on the ark?” Is the meaning of a sentence always the sum of its parts? This also show that people unconsciously normalize strange sentences to make them sensible. Many people answered two. Instead of thinking about the meaning behind the question.

7 7 Another experiment done by Barton and Sanford tested the ‘survivors’ anomaly, to the question ‘After an aircrash, where should the survivors be buried?’ injured Half of the participants gave an answer like ‘bury them where their relatives want’

8 8 Pragmatic and discourse influences on processing depth Like in the survivors example before, sometimes earlier knowledge is used in order to understand the meaning of the sentence. This is called Depth Charge. Example: No missile is too small to be banned No head injury is too trivial to be ignored.

9 9 Recent studies of whether interpretations are good enough Misinterpretations of Garden-Path Sentences Version 1Version 2 Do people delete from memory their initial misinterpretation of a sentence after reanalysis?

10 10 Recent studies of whether interpretations are good enough Misinterpretations of Garden-Path Sentences Example: While Anna dressed the baby played in the crib. (1) Did the baby play in the crib? (2) Did Anna dress the baby?

11 11 Misinterpretations of Garden-Path Sentences The goal of the experiment: Are people ever tricked by simple, but implausible, passive sentences? (1) The man bit the dog. (2) The man was bitten by the dog. (3) The dog bit the man. (4) The dog was bitten by the man. When people read or hear a passive sentence, they use their knowledge of the world to figure out who is doing what to whom. Recent studies of whether interpretations are good enough

12 12 The challenges in comprehension  The structure built by the language processor is fragile and decays rapidly,that’s why the representation needs almost immediate support from context or from schemas.  The linguistic system must cope with potentially interfering information.

13 13 What makes a structure likely to be misinterpreted? Passives require semantic roles to be assigned in an atypical order One example of a language that allows some freedom in the active and passive is Odawa.

14 14 For example: (1) Mary bought a brand new radio. (2) It was in Selfridge’s window. (3) Later, when Joan saw it, she too decided it would be a good purchase. Many processes are incomplete, and that interpretations are not as full as possible, but are often ‘underspecified’. Interpretations are not always full

15 15 Shallow processing in computational linguistics The sentence is not always fully analyzed. It depend on the requirement for a full/shallow analysis

16 16 Underspecification in human language understanding  Scope disambiguation  The selection of word meanings in cases of ambiguity of meaning Underspecification can be caused in three cases:

17 17  Scope disambiguation  The selection of word meanings in cases of ambiguity of meaning Underspecification in human language understanding

18 18 Scope disambiguation (1)Kelly showed every photo to a critic last month. (2) The critic was from a major gallery. (3) The critics were from a major gallery. If underspecified representations are used by humans, then people should be able to integrate the meaning of a multiply-quantified sentence without committing to any one scope ordering

19 19 (a) [ The scientist collaborates with the professor [who had advised the student [ who copies the article] ] ] (b) [The student [who the professor [ who the scientist collaborated with ] had advised ] copied the article] Sentences with a complex scoping can be harder to understand Example: you S  AS S  ASB

20 20 Underspecification in human language understanding  Scope disambiguation  The selection of word meanings in cases of ambiguity of meaning

21 21 Some words have several meanings,the question is do readers select between them? In the experiment two types of words were cheeked Words like: pupil - student/part of eye newspaper – printed paper/company Vietnam – the country/the war Ambiguity of meaning

22 22 Amanda believed the senator…. (a)… during the speech (b)… was lying to the committee. There are also problematic words like believe

23 23 Focus and subordination The word order, or the right question, can focus our attention on a specific word. For example in the Moses illusion: It was Moses who put two of each kind of animal on the ark. True or False?

24 24 Principle of compositionality Socrates was a man S was a M Meaning of a complex expression is determined by the meanings of its constituent expressions and the rules used to combine them.

25 25 Text change – detection: Changing the words in the sentence, after seeing it (A) The newsagent had just hired a new paperboy to cover the downtown area. The paperboy finished his rounds after he ate his breakfast. There were a lot of deliveries to be made. completed (B) The newsagent had just hired a new paperboy to cover the downtown area. After the paperboy finished his rounds, he ate his breakfast. There were a lot of deliveries to be made. started

26 26 Conclusions  Good-enough interpretations help the language system coordinate listening and speaking during conversation.  Subordination and focus represent ways of signaling what is important in a discourse, and we have seen how they play a role in determining depth of processing. We saw today that:  Some sentences are not analyzed always completely.  Parts of the sentence that aren’t analyzed are added from our previous experience or context


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