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Time in language: event duration in language comprehension
Authors:Coll-Florit Marta  Gennari Silvia P
Institution:aArts and Humanities Department, Open University of Catalonia (UOC), Tibidabo Avenue, 39-43, 08035 Barcelona, Spain;bDepartment of Psychology, University of York, York, YO10 5DD, UK
Abstract:This work investigates how we process and represent event duration in on-line language comprehension. Specifically, it examines how events of different duration are processed and what type of knowledge underlies their representations. Studies 1–4 examined verbs and phrases in different contexts. They showed that durative events took longer to process than non-durative events and that the duration attributed to the stimulus events correlated with on-line processing times. Studies 5 and 6 indicated that durative events occur in semantically more diverse contexts and elicit semantically more diverse associations than non-durative events. Semantic and contextual diversity also correlated with attributed durations and processing times. Results indicate that (a) event-specific durations are computed on-line from multiple unfolding cues, (b) processing cost and duration representations emerge from semantic and contextual diversity reflecting our experience, and (c) key components of duration representations may be situation-specific knowledge of causal and contingency relations between events.
Keywords:Language comprehension  Semantics  Event duration  Time perception  Event structure  Temporal language
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