An Agent‐First Preference in a Patient‐First Language During Sentence Comprehension

Author:

Sauppe Sebastian12,Næss Åshild3,Roversi Giovanni4,Meyer Martin125,Bornkessel‐Schlesewsky Ina6,Bickel Balthasar12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Comparative Language Science University of Zurich

2. Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Language Evolution University of Zurich

3. Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies University of Oslo

4. Department of Linguistics and Philosophy Massachusetts Institute of Technology

5. Cognitive Psychology Unit, Psychological Institute University of Klagenfurt

6. Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, Australian Research Centre for Interactive and Virtual Environments University of South Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe language comprehension system preferentially assumes that agents come first during incremental processing. While this might reflect a biologically fixed bias, shared with other domains and other species, the evidence is limited to languages that place agents first, and so the bias could also be learned from usage frequency. Here, we probe the bias with electroencephalography (EEG) in Äiwoo, a language that by default places patients first, but where sentence‐initial nouns are still locally ambiguous between patient or agent roles. Comprehenders transiently interpreted nonhuman nouns as patients, eliciting a negativity when disambiguation was toward the less common agent‐initial order. By contrast and against frequencies, human nouns were transiently interpreted as agents, eliciting an N400‐like negativity when the disambiguation was toward patient‐initial order. Consistent with the notion of a fixed property, the agent bias is robust against usage frequency for human referents. However, this bias can be reversed by frequency experience for nonhuman referents.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

National Geographic Society

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Cognitive Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

Reference119 articles.

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