Abstract

What are the roles of semantic and pragmatic processes in the interpretation of sentences in context? And how do we attain such interpretations when sentences are deemed indeterminate? Consider a sentence such as “Lisa began the book” which does not overtly express the activity that Lisa began doing with the book. Although it is believed that individuals compute a specified event to enrich the sentential representation – yielding, e.g., “began [reading] the book” – there is no evidence that a default event meaning is attained. Moreover, if indeterminate sentences are enriched, it is not clear where the information required to generate enriched interpretations come from. Experiment 1 showed that, in isolation, there is no default interpretation for indeterminate sentences. The experiment also showed that biasing contexts constrain event interpretations and improve plausibility judgments, suggesting that event representations for indeterminate sentences are generated by context. In Experiment 2, participants heard biasing discourse contexts and later falsely recognized foil sentences containing the biased events (“Lisa began reading the book”) at the same proportion and with the same confidence as the original indeterminate sentence (“Lisa began the book”). We suggest that indeterminate sentences trigger event-enriching inferences but only in sufficiently constraining contexts. We also suggest that indeterminate sentences create two memory traces, one for the proposition consistent with the denotational, compositional meaning, and another for the proposition that is enriched pragmatically over time.

Highlights

  • We are rarely faced with the task of understanding sentences in isolation

  • While one would hardly dispute that discourse context exerts an influence on how one might interpret a sentence, our goal was to focus on the propositional content that is obtained as an indeterminate sentence and is heard and what becomes of this proposition in memory over time

  • In our Experiment 2, we further investigated whether contextualized indeterminate sentences trigger event interpretations, using a long-term memory (LTM) recognition paradigm that relies on recovering the propositional content of sentences (Sachs, 1967, 1974)

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Summary

Introduction

We are rarely faced with the task of understanding sentences in isolation. If you were told upon breaking into a sneezing fit, Do not worry, you are not going to die, you would not likely interpret this sentence as declaring your immortality, nor would you think it is false. You would take the sentence to convey that you are not going to die as a consequence of your sneezing. Such indeterminacies are ubiquitous in natural language and are generally taken to be resolvable by filling-in the “blanks” – or what Perry (1986) called “unarticulated constituents” – with information supplied by context or by some default semantic operation

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