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Exploring Individual Differences in Recognizing Idiomatic Expressions in Context.
Mesian Tilmatine1,2, Ferdy Hubers2, Florian Hintz3
1Free University Berlin, Berlin, DE.
Context does not significantly impact idiom comprehension, but individual reader differences greatly influence how easily people process idioms. This highlights the importance of personal linguistic skills in understanding figurative language.
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Area of Science:
- Cognitive Psychology
- Psycholinguistics
- Neuroscience
Background:
- Written language comprehension involves integrating new information with existing knowledge.
- Idiomatic expressions can have both literal and figurative meanings, with context influencing interpretation.
- Prior research indicates context can facilitate idiom processing, but individual differences also play a role.
Purpose of the Study:
- To investigate the interaction between reader-specific variables and contextual facilitation in idiom processing.
- To determine if individual differences in linguistic and cognitive skills affect sensitivity to contextual cues for idioms.
Main Methods:
- A self-paced reading experiment was conducted with participants who underwent extensive individual differences testing.
- Participants read idiomatic expressions presented in isolation or preceded by context biasing literal or figurative interpretation.
- Reading times for idiom-final nouns and spill-over regions were analyzed alongside individual differences data.
Main Results:
- No significant main effect of context on idiom processing was found.
- Substantial variation in reading times was observed between individual readers.
- Significant individual variation in the degree of contextual facilitation was evident.
Conclusions:
- Contextual biasing does not appear to be a universal facilitator for idiom comprehension.
- Individual differences in linguistic knowledge and cognitive skills are critical factors in idiom processing.
- The findings underscore the heterogeneity of idiom comprehension mechanisms across readers.