Effects of Age, Speed of Processing, and Working Memory on Comprehension of Sentences With Relative Clauses

被引:113
|
作者
Caplan, David [1 ]
DeDe, Gayle [2 ]
Waters, Gloria [3 ]
Michaud, Jennifer [1 ]
Tripodis, Yorghos [4 ]
机构
[1] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Neuropsychol Lab, Dept Neurol, Boston, MA 02114 USA
[2] Univ Arizona, Dept Speech Language & Hearing Sci, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
[3] Boston Univ, Dept Speech & Hearing Sci, Sargent Coll, Boston, MA 02215 USA
[4] Boston Univ, Dept Biostat, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA 02215 USA
关键词
aging; working memory; speed of processing; syntactic comprehension; SPOKEN-LANGUAGE COMPREHENSION; ONLINE LEXICAL DECISION; EYE-MOVEMENTS; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; AMBIGUITY RESOLUTION; SYNTACTIC AMBIGUITY; CAPACITY THEORY; VISUAL CONTEXT; CARPENTER; 1992; INTERFERENCE;
D O I
10.1037/a0021837
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学]; R592 [老年病学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100203 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Two hundred participants, 50 in each of four age ranges (19-29, 30-49, 50-69, 70-90) were tested for working memory, speed of processing, and the processing of sentences with relative clauses. In Experiment 1, participants read four sentence types (cleft subject, cleft object, subject-subject, subject-object) in a word-by-word, non-cumulative, self-paced reading task and made speeded plausibility judgments about them. In Experiment 2, participants read two types of sentences, one of which contained a doubly center embedded relative clause. Older participants' comprehension was less accurate and there was age-related slowing of online processing times in all but the simplest sentences, which increased in syntactically complex sentences in Experiment 1. This pattern suggests an age-related decrease in the efficiency of parsing and interpretation. Slower speed of processing and lower working memory were associated with longer online processing times only in Experiment 2, suggesting that task-related operations are related to general speed of processing and working memory. Lower working memory was not associated with longer reading times in more complex sentences, consistent with the view that general working memory is not critically involved in online syntactic processing. Longer online processing at the most demanding point in the most demanding sentence was associated with better comprehension, indicating that it reflects effective processing under some certain circumstances. However, the poorer comprehension performance of older individuals indicates that their slower online processing reflects inefficient processing even at these points.
引用
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页码:439 / 450
页数:12
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