Abstract

Studies on sentence comprehension have centered on understanding the intersection between language and cognition. The aim of the current study was to examine the association between complex sentence comprehension and working memory (WM) in Malay adults. We predicted that WM storage (as indexed by performance on a WM listening span task) would be invoked during the processing of complex Malay sentences (object relatives), but not simple sentences (subject-verb-object). Sixty adults participated in the study; 30 Malay- and 30 English native speakers. The experimental tasks were developed in both Malay and English versions for both groups respectively. Participants completed (i) two sets of sentence comprehension tasks (whereby comprehension was determined via selection of the agent of the sentence), and (ii) a conventional WM listening span task. Tasks were designed to be structurally similar in terms of length (within the language) and meaning (across both languages). Both groups performed significantly better on the comprehension of simple sentences as compared to complex sentences and obtained similar mean scores on the WM listening span task. For Malay comprehenders, WM storage did not significantly correlate with comprehension of simple sentences as well as complex sentences. The same correlation pattern was also revealed for the English comprehenders. Our predictions were partially borne out. Findings suggest that participants’ comprehension of complex sentences did not invite WM storage, as it would seem that both Malay and English participants were still able to comprehend these complex sentences without having to tax their WM capacity. Although we anticipated a relation, the absence of such an association is not entirely unexpected. Potential explanations are discussed in this article.

Highlights

  • The role of working memory (WM) in adult sentence comprehension has been widely explored for the English language

  • The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the comprehension of Malay complex sentences imposes similar WM storage and processing demands for Malay comprehenders, as the comprehension of English complex sentences does for English comprehenders; as indexed by performance on a conventional WM listening span measure

  • Since working memory storage was not implicated in the processing of these sentences, findings from the present study may be used as a baseline on the sources of complexity that could be included/manipulated, to ascertain the potential relationship between WM capacity and the comprehension of Malay object relatives (OR) sentences (Carpenter et al, 1994)

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Summary

Introduction

The role of working memory (WM) in adult sentence comprehension has been widely explored for the English language. The one memory mechanism that has received the most attention is WM storage, with an eye toward determining whether comprehenders have sufficient memory storage to support comprehension. Complex sentence structures such as object relatives (OR) are often used as a means to examine the role of WM storage supporting sentence comprehension. Research into the association between WM and complex sentence comprehension has received little attention across other languages. A (Main & Corresponding author) eISSN: 2550-2131 ISSN: 1675-8021 Examining this intersection in the Malay language would be an interesting cross language research pursuit because Malay, like English, is primarily a subject-verb-object (SVO) word order language. The purpose of the present study was to examine this intersection in the Malay language

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