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A failure to replicate rapid syntactic adaptation in comprehension.

Caoimhe M Harrington Stack1, Ariel N James2, Duane G Watson3

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|April 14, 2018
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Listeners may adapt to unexpected sentence structures, but this study found no evidence of rapid syntactic adaptation. Replications failed to confirm the effect, questioning its robustness in language processing.

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Area of Science:

  • Psycholinguistics
  • Cognitive Science
  • Computational Linguistics

Background:

  • Language comprehension involves managing linguistic variability.
  • Syntactic adaptation, or rapidly updating expectations for linguistic events, is a proposed mechanism for this management.
  • Previous research suggested rapid syntactic adaptation occurs in unexpected structures.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the robustness of rapid syntactic adaptation.
  • To replicate and extend a previous study on syntactic adaptation to reduced relative clauses (RCs).

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments were conducted to test for syntactic adaptation.
  • Experiment 1 aimed to replicate a previous study, while Experiment 2 used increased sample sizes based on power analysis.
  • Participants processed sentences with ambiguous verb interpretations (main verb vs. reduced relative clause).

Main Results:

  • Experiment 1 failed to find evidence of syntactic adaptation.
  • Experiment 2, with a larger sample size, also found no evidence of rapid syntactic adaptation.
  • These findings challenge the robustness of the previously reported effect.

Conclusions:

  • The evidence for rapid syntactic adaptation in processing unexpected linguistic structures is not robust.
  • Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms of language comprehension and adaptation.
  • The findings call into question the reliability of the original syntactic adaptation effect.