Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 June 2016
In this paper we investigated the real-time processing of epistemic modals in five-year-olds. In a simple reasoning scenario, we monitored children's eye-movements while processing a sentence with modal expressions of different force (might/must). Children were also asked to judge the truth-value of the target sentences at the end of the reasoning task. Consistent with previous findings (Noveck, 2001), we found that children's behavioural responses were much less accurate compared to adults. Their eye-movements, however, revealed that children did not treat the two modal expressions alike. As soon as a modal expression was presented, children and adults showed a similar fixation pattern that varied as a function of the modal expression they heard. It is only at the very end of the sentence that children's fixations diverged from the adult ones. We discuss these findings in relation to the proposal that children narrow down the set of possible outcomes in undetermined reasoning scenarios and endorse only one possibility among several (Acredolo & Horobin, 1987, Ozturk & Papafragou, 2015).
We wish to thank Milena Romano for her help in recruiting and testing our young participants. This study is the result of the joint work of the authors, who equally contributed to the paper. For the sole purpose of the Italian academic system, V. Moscati is directly responsible for the ‘Introduction’ and the ‘Method’ sections. L. Zhan for ‘Results’ and ‘Discussion’ and P. Zhou for the ‘Conclusion’.