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The Role of Syntactic and Semantic Cues in Preventing Temporary Illusions of Plausibility

Stone, Kate; Rabovsky, Milena

Authors

Milena Rabovsky



Abstract

Unexpected words within a context elicit large N400 brain potentials. However, sometimes the N400 at an unexpected word is small when stereotypical agent and patient roles are reversed, such as at “arrested” in “the cop that the thief arrested.” In a study of 74 native German speakers, we demonstrate evidence that readers can avoid this so-called “N400 semantic illusion” if the verb is delayed with neutral information such as “that evening,” but are less able to do so if the delay contains cues that could further strengthen the canonical interpretation, such as “with handcuffs.” In doing so, we provide a conceptual replication of a relatively new finding and extend previous research by showing that the semantic content of the delay is important. Moreover, we demonstrate evidence that the effect of only the neutral delay increases as the experiment progresses. We propose an interpretation of these findings with reference to the Sentence Gestalt model [Rabovsky, M., Hansen, S. S., & McClelland, J. L. Modelling the N400 brain potential as change in a probabilistic representation of meaning. Nature Human Behaviour, 2, 693, 2018], which accounts for the initial illusion as resulting from uncertainty and an erroneous interpretation based on a strong semantic attractor. Two additional, novel contributions of the work are a demonstration that the illusion can be elicited in German, despite its explicit subject–object case marking, and an exploration of illusion effect among individual readers.

Citation

Stone, K., & Rabovsky, M. (online). The Role of Syntactic and Semantic Cues in Preventing Temporary Illusions of Plausibility. Journal of cognitive neuroscience, https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_02320

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 22, 2025
Online Publication Date Mar 14, 2025
Deposit Date Jun 6, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jun 6, 2025
Journal Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Print ISSN 0898-929X
Publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_02320
Keywords N400, psycholinguistics, neurolinguistics, plausibility illusions
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/5234960

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