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Comprehension: Written and Spoken Language

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Title: Comprehension: Written and Spoken Language


1
Chapter 10
  • Comprehension Written and Spoken Language

2
Overview
  • We focus here on Millers fourth and fifth levels
    of language analysis-- the conceptual and belief
    levels.
  • Example
  • Ambiguous sentences, revisited
  • Mary and John saw the mountains while they were
    flying to California.

3
Traditional Comprehension Research
  • Linguistic intuitions Judgements about the
    acceptability of sentences.
  • Sachs (1967)
  • Jarvella (1970)
  • People hold information about a sentence in
    memory until the sentence, or a meaningful
    clause, is completed.

4
Limitations of Traditional Research
  • Raised more questions than it answered.
  • We need more precise methods of investigating
    comprehension.
  • Measures that allow us to study comprehension as
    it happens.

5
On-Line Measures of Comprehension
  • Measure comprehension as it happens.
  • Written Language A sentence appears on-screen,
    followed by a word. Subjects decide if the word
    was in the just-read sentence.
  • Spoken Language
  • The interruption technique.
  • Monitoring.

6
Comprehension and Mental Structure Building
  • Gernsbacher (1990)
  • Language comprehension is a process of building
    mental structures.
  • Involves Laying a foundation, mapping
    information onto the structure, and shifting to a
    new structure.

7
The Structure Building Framework
8
Evidence for Structure Building
  • Advantage of First Mention
  • Ideas mentioned in the first sentence retain a
    special significance.
  • Advantage of Clause Recency
  • Where the most recently presented character shows
    an advantage.

9
Definite Versus Indefinite Articles
  • The is a definite article.
  • A, an, and some are indefinite articles.
  • Gernsbacher predicts sentences with definite
    articles will be more coherent and sensible then
    sentences with indefinite articles.

10
Sample Sentences
11
Enhancement and Suppression
  • Enhancement
  • Where memory nodes are boosted or enhanced in
    their level of activation.
  • Suppression
  • Where activated nodes that become unrelated to
    the focus decrease in activation.

12
Situation Models and Comprehension
  • A situation model is a representation of the real
    world situation described in a passage of text.
  • They include temporal and spatial information,
    information about the objects, locations and
    people mentioned in the stories, and the
    inferences we draw while comprehending the
    stories.

13
Reference
  • Involves finding connections between elements in
    a sentence or text passage.
  • Dave studied hard for his statistics exam.
  • Antecedent Dave
  • Anaphoric Reference His
  • Reference Linguistic process of alluding to a
    concept by using another name.

14
Implication and Inference
  • Implication An intended-- but not explicitly
    mentioned-- reference in a sentence.
  • Inference The process by which the reader draws
    connections between concepts, determines
    referents and derives conclusions.

15
Types of Reference and Implication (Clark, 1977)
16
Bridging
  • Clarks term for the process of constructing a
    connection between concepts.
  • Speakers and listeners must both build the same
    bridges.
  • Authorized When the listener draws the inference
    intended by the speaker.
  • Unauthorized A mistaken inference on the
    listeners part.

17
Multiple Processes in Drawing Inferences
  • Three steps
  • Retrieving related information from memory.
  • Storing this information in memory so you can
    make connections / draw inferences.
  • Integrating meanings -- making connections
    between antecedents and referents.

18
The Extent of Drawing Inferences
  • How extensively do people draw inferences when
    comprehending?
  • Minimalist position Only to the extent that the
    information cannot be retrieved automatically.
  • Does this position underestimate the extent of
    inference drawing during normal comprehension?

19
Reading
  • Just and Carpenter (1980)
  • Gaze Duration Procedures
  • On line technique for studying reading
    comprehension.
  • Uses an eye-tracker and camera to measure how
    long the eyes dwell on each word.

20
Gaze Duration Assumptions
  • Immediacy
  • Readers interpret each content word of a text as
    they encounter it in the passage.
  • Eye-Mind
  • The eye remains fixated on a word as long as the
    word is being actively processed during reading.

21
Online Reading Effects
  • Regressive eye movements (back to a
    previously-read portion of text).
  • Most content words are fixated on.
  • Saccades are shorter here than in scene
    perception.
  • Meaningless words (the, of) are rarely fixated
    on.

22
Sample Eye Fixations
23
The Just and Carpenter Model
  • Evidence at two levels of comprehension.
  • Microscopic / Word level processes.
  • Macroscopic processes such as comprehension time
    at the idea and proposition level.

24
Just and Carpenter Model, Illustrated
25
Spoken Language and Conversation
  • Studying Spoken Comprehension
  • The auditory spoken window
  • Recorded passages are coded into units, and then
    played to subjects one unit at a time.
  • Subjects press a button to advance to the next
    unit.
  • Each button press is timed.

26
The Structure of Conversations (Taking Turns)
  • Typically, there is little overlap between
    participants utterances.
  • Rules
  • 1) The current speaker gets to select the next
    speaker.
  • 2) If Rule 1 is not used, anyone can become the
    next speaker.

27
Social Roles and Settings
  • Formal settings among strangers lead to more
    structured, rule-governed conversations.
  • Superiors have more leeway in breaking the
    turn-taking rules.
  • Men more likely to interrupt women than the
    reverse.

28
Conversational Rules
  • Grice (1975)
  • Are derived from the Cooperative Principle
  • Each participant in a conversation implicitly
    assumes that all speakers are following the rules
    and that each contribution to the conversation is
    sincere and appropriate.

29
Grices Conversational Maxims
30
Topic Maintenance
  • Process of making our contributions relevant and
    to the topic.
  • Schank (1977)
  • Studied permissible and impermissible moves
    participants can make with regard to topic
    shifts.

31
Online Theories During Conversation
  • Direct Model of what our conversational partner
    knows and is interested in, what the partner is
    like.
  • Second-Order An evaluation of the other
    participants direct theory -- what you think
    he/she believes about you.

32
Empirical Effects in Conversation
  • Indirect Requests When we ask someone to do
    something by an indirect and presumably more
    polite statement.
  • Do you have the time,
  • -Versus
  • What time is it?

33
Face Saving (Holtgraves, 1998)
  • Nicks class presentation either went well or
    went poorly. Nick asks you how he did?
  • Violations of the relevance maxim are acceptable
    if meant to save face (e.g., we change the topic
    rather than tell Nick how bad his presentation
    was).

34
Egocentric Speech
  • Optimal Design Principle Speakers design
    utterances so listeners can understand them.
  • Keysar (1998) Adults-- much like children-- often
    disregard this principle by speaking
    egocentrically (by failing to appreciate another
    persons perspective).
  • Our first pass at an utterance is typically
    egocentric.

35
Summary of Major Topics Covered in Chapter 10
  • Overview (conceptual and rule knowledge,
    comprehension research and tasks, structure
    building and situational models).
  • Reference, Inference and Memory.
  • Reading.
  • Spoken Language and Conversation.
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