• Title of article

    Aging and individual differences in binding during sentence understanding: Evidence from temporary and global syntactic attachment ambiguities

  • Author/Authors

    Payne، نويسنده , , Brennan R. and Grison، نويسنده , , Sarah and Gao، نويسنده , , Xuefei and Christianson، نويسنده , , Kiel and Morrow، نويسنده , , Daniel G. and Stine-Morrow، نويسنده , , Elizabeth A.L. Fairley، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    17
  • From page
    157
  • To page
    173
  • Abstract
    We report an investigation of aging and individual differences in binding information during sentence understanding. An age-continuous sample of adults (N = 91), ranging from 18 to 81 years of age, read sentences in which a relative clause could be attached high to a head noun NP1, attached low to its modifying prepositional phrase NP2 (e.g., The son of the princess who scratched himself/herself in public was humiliated), or in which the attachment site of the relative clause was ultimately indeterminate (e.g., The maid of the princess who scratched herself in public was humiliated). Word-by-word reading times and comprehension (e.g., who scratched?) were measured. A series of mixed-effects models were fit to the data, revealing: (1) that, on average, NP1-attached sentences were harder to process and comprehend than NP2-attached sentences; (2) that these average effects were independently moderated by verbal working memory capacity and reading experience, with effects that were most pronounced in the oldest participants and; (3) that readers on average did not allocate extra time to resolve global ambiguities, though older adults with higher working memory span did. Findings are discussed in relation to current models of lifespan cognitive development, working memory, language experience, and the role of prosodic segmentation strategies in reading. Collectively, these data suggest that aging brings differences in sentence understanding, and these differences may depend on independent influences of verbal working memory capacity and reading experience.
  • Keywords
    aging , Working memory , Print exposure , reading , sentence processing , Relative clause attachment
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Record number

    2077947