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6 - Information integration in sentence processing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2012

Keiko Koda
Affiliation:
Carnegie Mellon University
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Summary

The preceding chapters described the manner in which lexical information is learned, stored, and accessed during comprehension. Word identification, in itself, however, does not explain how meaning is constructed from visual input. Isolated words, for example, must be incrementally integrated into larger linguistic units – that is, phrases, clauses, and sentences – by incorporating their syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic information. Linguistic knowledge, therefore, is a major source of individual differences in sentence processing. Although texts vary considerably in their lexical and syntactic features, we have limited understanding of how the linguistic variables affect sentence comprehension. If some features have more impact on processing efficiency than others, we need to isolate them, disentangle their effects, and explore causal linkages with specific reading difficulties. Consequently, building on information extraction at the word level, this chapter explores information integration at the sentence level. After examining the relationship between linguistic variables and comprehension difficulty, by reviewing several models of sentence processing, it describes logical ways to compare processing procedures across typologically diverse languages. The implications of L1 research findings for L2 comprehension also are considered in a review of empirical studies on L2 sentence processing.

Linguistic complexity and comprehension difficulty

Linguistic determinants of text complexity

Whether systematicity exists in the relationship between syntactic features and comprehension problems has long received research attention. The resurrection of interest in the relationship has prompted major controversy between conventional views of text complexity and its automatic connection with reading difficulty.

Type
Chapter
Information
Insights into Second Language Reading
A Cross-Linguistic Approach
, pp. 95 - 122
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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