Publication | Open Access
Eyetracking while reading passives: an event structure account of difficulty
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Citations
37
References
2021
Year
NeurolinguisticsSemantic ProcessingIndividual DifferencesPsycholinguisticsCognitionAttentionSocial SciencesExperimental PragmaticLanguage TestingCognitive AnalysisLanguage StudiesPsychophysicsEvent Structure AccountCognitive SciencePassivisation DifficultyLinguisticsHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologyImplicit MemoryEye TrackingLanguage ComprehensionPassive DifficultyPassive StructureCognitive Psychology
Among existing accounts of passivisation difficulty, some argue it depends on the predicate semantics (i.e. passives are more difficult with subject-experiencer than agent-patient verbs). Inconsistent with the accounts that predict passive difficulty, Paolazzi et al. (2019) found that passives were read faster than actives at the verb and object by-phrase in a series of self-paced reading experiments, with no modulation of verb type. However, self-paced reading provides limited direct measurement of late revision/interpretive processing. We used modified stimuli from Paolazzi et al. (2019) to re-examine this issue in two eye-tracking while reading experiments. We found that in late measures, passives with subject-experiencer verbs had longer fixation durations than actives at the verb and two subsequent regions but no difference was observed across agent-patient verbs. Subject-experiencer verbs provide a state, but the passive structure requires an event. Thus, the required eventive interpretation is coerced with subject-experiencers (if possible) and induces difficulty.
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