Mental simulation of the factual and the illusory in negation processing: evidence from anticipatory eye movements on a blank screen
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35131Date
2024-02-03Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
How do comprehenders process negative statements such as The fish is not jumping out of the water?
Opinions vary. Some argue for two steps, namely that processing starts of with the representation
of the positive/illusory [fish jumping out of the water] and then shifts to the (f)actual. To test this
idea, we measured fixations on the factual (fish not jumping) versus the illusory (fish jumping) during
auditory processing of negation and affirmation. We tested speakers of English (single-cued negation)
and Croatian (double-cued negation) and focused on anticipatory fixations in the absence of pictures
to indicate the strength of mental simulations. Our findings contribute to negation processing
research in two ways. First, dominant anticipatory fixations on the factual suggest a direct rather than
a two-step process. Second, time-sensitive insights from two languages call for a finer-grained account
of negation processing with negation-specific support of inferences of the factual over the illusory.
Publisher
Springer NatureCitation
Vanek, Matić Škorić, Košutar, Matějka, Stone. Mental simulation of the factual and the illusory in negation processing: evidence from anticipatory eye movements on a blank screen. Scientific Reports. 2024;14(1)Metadata
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