“Anaphoric Islands” Revisited

Author:

Garnham Alan1,Oakhill Jane2

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Research on Perception and Cognition, University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K.

2. MRC Perceptual and Cognitive Performance Unit, University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K.

Abstract

This paper reports two experiments in which subjects made timed judgements about the acceptability of a sentence or clause containing a pronoun that followed either an explicit nominal antecedent (e.g. … dreams … them …) or an implicit antecedent suggested by the verb corresponding to the noun. In Experiment 1 the verb was identical to the nominal antecedent ( dreams), and in Experiment 2 it was different ( dreamed). In both experiments pronouns with implicit antecedents were judged less acceptable than those with explicit antecedents. This tendency was more pronounced in Experiment 2. Furthermore, the times to make the judgements about pronouns with implicit antecedents were longer than for those with explicit antecedents. However, the effect on judgement times was of a similar magnitude in both experiments. These results suggest that when people read about an activity such as dreaming, they do not automatically represent dreams in their mental representation of the passage, but must infer their existence from a subsequent pronominal reference to them.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

Cited by 8 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Anaphoric Islands and Anaphoric Forms: The Role of Explicit and Implicit Focus;Discourse Processes;2017-07-12

2. Language Processing;Stevens' Handbook of Experimental Psychology;2002-07-15

3. Anaphora;Handbook of Pragmatics;2000-08-15

4. The use of superficial and meaning-based representations in interpreting pronouns: Evidence from Spanish;European Journal of Cognitive Psychology;1993-03

5. Linguistic prescriptions and anaphoric reality;Text - Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Discourse;1992

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