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Temporal construal in sentence comprehension depends on linguistically encoded event structure
Title / Series / Name
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
Pages
Authors
Editors
Keywords
Discourse pragmatics
Event cognition
Linguistic event type
Relative clauses
Temporal construal
Video-sentence matching task
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Language and Linguistics
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Linguistics and Language
Cognitive Neuroscience
Event cognition
Linguistic event type
Relative clauses
Temporal construal
Video-sentence matching task
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Language and Linguistics
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Linguistics and Language
Cognitive Neuroscience
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14018/27122
Abstract
How events are ordered in time is one of the most fundamental pieces of information guiding our understanding of the world. Linguistically, this order is often not mentioned explicitly. Here, we propose that the mental construal of temporal order in language comprehension is based on event-structural properties. This prediction is based on a central distinction between states and events both in event perception and language: In perception, dynamic events are more salient than static states. In language, stative and eventive predicates also differ, both in their grammatical behavior and how they are processed. Consistent with our predictions, data from seven pre-registered video-sentence matching experiments, each conducted in English and German (total N = 674), show that people draw temporal inferences based on this difference: States precede events. Our findings not only arbitrate between different theories of temporal language comprehension; they also advance theoretical models of how two different cognitive capacities - event cognition and language - integrate to form a mental representation of time.
Topic
Publisher
Place of Publication
Type
Journal article
Date
2025-01
Language
ISBN
Identifiers
10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105975