Abstract

Establishing local coherence relations is central to text comprehension. Positive-causal coherence relations link a cause and its consequence, whereas negative-causal coherence relations add a contrastive meaning (negation) to the causal link. According to the cumulative cognitive complexity approach, negative-causal coherence relations are cognitively more complex than positive-causal ones. Therefore, they require greater cognitive effort during text comprehension and are acquired later in language development. The present cross-sectional study tested these predictions for German primary school children from Grades 1 to 4 and adults in reading and listening comprehension. Accuracy data in a semantic verification task support the predictions of the cumulative cognitive complexity approach. Negative-causal coherence relations are cognitively more demanding than positive-causal ones. Moreover, our findings indicate that children's comprehension of negative-causal coherence relations continues to develop throughout the course of primary school. Findings are discussed with respect to the generalizability of the cumulative cognitive complexity approach to German.

Highlights

  • Text comprehension may be regarded as building a coherent mental representation of the text and its contents

  • According to the cumulative cognitive complexity approach (Evers-Vermeul & Sanders, ; Spooren & Sanders, ), positive-causal and negative-causal relations differ in internal complexity, and vary in the cognitive effort they require during text comprehension

  • Log-transformed response latencies were analyzed using Linear Mixed Models (LMM: Baayen, Davidson & Bates, ) with crossed random effects for items nested within participants and participants nested within items

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Summary

Introduction

Text comprehension may be regarded as building a coherent mental representation of the text and its contents. According to the cumulative cognitive complexity approach (Evers-Vermeul & Sanders, ; Spooren & Sanders, ), positive-causal and negative-causal relations differ in internal complexity, and vary in the cognitive effort they require during text comprehension (a detailed explanation is provided ). The order of acquisition of coherence relations is assumed to depend on their internal complexity. Less complex relations, such as positive-causal coherence relations, are assumed to be acquired earlier than negative-causal coherence relations. Studies investigating the processing of coherence relations on English- and Dutch-speaking children and adults report findings that are consistent with the cumulative cognitive complexity approach (e.g. Bloom, Lahey, Hood, Lifter & Fiess, ; Evers-Vermeul & Sanders, ; Goldman & Murray, ; Spooren & Sanders, )

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