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Related Experiment Video
Updated: May 14, 2026

Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects
Published on: November 30, 2018
Good-enough language processing: evidence from sentence-video matching.
Gaurav Kharkwal1, Karin Stromswold
1Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA, kharkwal@rutgers.edu.
Participants process language with varying detail based on task complexity. Encountering both active and passive sentences leads to more detailed linguistic analysis than only active sentences.
Area of Science:
- Cognitive Science
- Psycholinguistics
- Computational Linguistics
Background:
- Understanding the depth of linguistic representation is crucial for cognitive science.
- Previous models suggest language processing can be heuristic or syntactic.
Purpose of the Study:
- To investigate the level of detail in linguistic representations for visual event descriptions.
- To examine how sentence structure complexity (active vs. passive) influences language processing.
Main Methods:
- Two experiments were conducted where participants viewed videos of moving shapes with captions.
- Participants judged the accuracy of captions describing the visual events.
- Experiment 1 used only active voice captions; Experiment 2 used both active and passive voice captions.
Main Results:
- Participants exposed to both active and passive sentences showed more detailed linguistic analysis.
- Those who only encountered active sentences performed less detailed analyses.
- Linguistic representation detail correlates with task complexity.
Conclusions:
- The level of linguistic detail encoded is adaptive and task-dependent.
- Findings support "good enough" models of language processing, where efficiency is balanced with accuracy.
- Sentence complexity influences the depth of cognitive processing during language comprehension.
