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An eye on semantics: a study on the influence of concreteness and predictability on early fixation durations.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

We used eye-tracking during natural reading to study how semantic control and representation mechanisms interact for the successful comprehension of sentences, by manipulating sentence context and single-word meaning. Specifically, we examined whether a word's semantic characteristic (concreteness) affects first fixation and gaze durations (FFDs and GDs) and whether it interacts with the predictability of a word. We used a linear mixed effects model including several possible psycholinguistic covariates. We found a small but reliable main effect of concreteness and replicated a predictability effect on FFDs, but we found no interaction between the two. The results parallel previous findings of additive effects of predictability (context) and frequency (lexical level) in fixation times. Our findings suggest that the semantics of a word and the context created by the preceding words additively influence early stages of word processing in natural sentence reading.

Description

Journal Title

Lang Cogn Neurosci

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2327-3798
2327-3801

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
ESRC (2437750)
MRC (MC_UU_00030/9)