Publication | Open Access
The role of verb repetition in cumulative structural priming in comprehension.
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2016
Year
Text StructureNeurolinguisticsSemantic ProcessingCognitionPsycholinguisticsStructural PrimingSyntactic StructureLanguage LearningStructural PrimesSocial SciencesLanguage ProcessingCognitive LinguisticsSyntaxVerb RepetitionGrammarLanguage StudiesCognitive ScienceSyntactic InformationLanguage ComprehensionCumulative Structural PrimingLinguistics
Recently processed syntactic information is likely to play a fundamental role in online sentence comprehension. For example, there is now a good deal of evidence that the processing of a syntactic structure (the target) is facilitated if the same structure was processed on the immediately preceding trial (the prime), a phenomenon known as structural priming. However, compared with structural priming in production, structural priming in comprehension remains relatively understudied. We investigate an aspect of structural priming in comprehension that is comparatively well understood in production but has received little attention in comprehension: the cumulative effect of structural primes on subsequently processed sentences. We further ask whether this effect is modulated by lexical overlap between preceding primes and the target. In 3 self-paced reading experiments, we find that structural priming effects in comprehension are cumulative and of similar magnitude both with and without lexical overlap. We discuss the relevance of our results to questions about the relationship between recent experience and online language processing. (PsycINFO Database Record