Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Coercion" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Indeterminate and Enriched Propositions in Context Linger: Evidence From an Eye-Tracking False Memory Paradigm Antal C; de Almeida RG; 34744914
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Ethnoracial Differences in Coercive Referral and Intervention Among Patients With First-Episode Psychosis Knight S; Jarvis GE; Ryder AG; Lashley M; Rousseau C; 34253035
PSYCHOLOGY
3 The Neuronal Correlates of Indeterminate Sentence Comprehension: An fMRI Study. de Almeida RG, Riven L, Manouilidou C, Lungu O, Dwivedi VD, Jarema G, Gillon B 28066204
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Children's Early Disruptive Behavior Predicts Later Coercive Behavior and Binge Drinking by Mothers. Pagani LS, Fitzpatrick C 29525211
PERFORM

 

Title:Indeterminate and Enriched Propositions in Context Linger: Evidence From an Eye-Tracking False Memory Paradigm
Authors:Antal Cde Almeida RG
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34744914/
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2021.741685
Publication:Frontiers in psychology
Keywords:compositionalitydiscourse contexteye-trackingfalse memoryindeterminate sentence comprehensionpragmaticspropositionssemantic coercion
PMID:34744914 Category: Date Added:2021-11-08
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

A sentence such as We finished the paper is indeterminate with regards to what we finished doing with the paper. Indeterminate sentences constitute a test case for two major issues regarding language comprehension: (1) how we compose sentence meaning; and (2) what is retained in memory about what we read in context over time. In an eye-tracking experiment, participants read short stories that were unexpectedly followed by one of three recognition probes: (a) an indeterminate sentence (Lisa began the book), that is identical to the one in the story; (b) an enriched but false probe (Lisa began reading the book); and (c) a contextually unrelated probe (Lisa began writing the book). The probes were presented either at the offset of the original indeterminate sentence in context or following additional neutral discourse. We measured accuracy, probe recognition time, and reading times of the probe sentences. Results showed that, at the immediate time point, participants correctly accepted the identical probes with high accuracy and short recognition times, but that this effect reversed to chance-level accuracy and significantly longer recognition times at the delayed time point. We also found that participants falsely accept the enriched probe at both time points 50% of the time. There were no reading-time differences between identical and enriched probes, suggesting that enrichment might not be an early, mandatory process for indeterminate sentences. Overall, results suggest that while context produces an enriched proposition, an unenriched proposition true to the indeterminate sentence also lingers in memory.





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