Abstract
Recent findings have shown that information about changes in an object's environmental location in the context of discourse is stored in working memory during sentence comprehension. However, in these studies, changes in the object's location were always consistent with world knowledge (e.g., in “The writer picked up the pen from the floor and moved it to the desk,” the floor and the desk are both common locations for a pen). How do people accomplish comprehension when the object-location information in working memory is inconsistent with world knowledge (e.g., a pen being moved from the floor to the bathtub)? In two visual world experiments, with a “look-and-listen” task, we used eye-tracking data to investigate comprehension of sentences that described location changes under different conditions of appropriateness (i.e., the object and its location were typically vs. unusually coexistent, based on world knowledge) and antecedent context (i.e., contextual information that did vs. did not temporarily normalize unusual coexistence between object and location). Results showed that listeners' retrieval of the critical location was affected by both world knowledge and working memory, and the effect of world knowledge was reduced when the antecedent context normalized unusual coexistence of object and location. More importantly, activation of world knowledge and working memory seemed to change during the comprehension process. These results are important because they demonstrate that interference between world knowledge and information in working memory, appears to be activated dynamically during sentence comprehension.
Highlights
Sentence comprehension necessarily involves constructing a representation of the state of affairs described in a text (Zwaan and Radvansky, 1998)
The current study used eye-tracking data to test whether this type of sentence comprehension is affected both by information in working memory and by information in long-term memory
The findings in the present two experiments indicated that object-location information in working memory affects real time sentence comprehension as well as retrieval
Summary
Sentence comprehension necessarily involves constructing a representation of the state of affairs described in a text (Zwaan and Radvansky, 1998). Environmental location, called location for short in the present study, is defined here as a place that an object was staying and the place that the object was going to stay This definition is consistent with the current relevant literature (Kahneman et al, 1992; Zwaan and Radvansky, 1998; Hoover and Richardson, 2008; Altmann and Kamide, 2009). In comprehending this type of sentence, readers recruit information from general world knowledge (long-term memory) and temporary information about the object and its location (processed in working memory) (Mumper, 2013)
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