The Comprehension of Counterfactual Conditionals: Evidence From Eye-Tracking in the Visual World Paradigm

被引:9
作者
Orenes, Isabel [1 ]
Garcia-Madruga, Juan A. [2 ]
Gomez-Veiga, Isabel [2 ]
Espino, Orlando [3 ]
Byrne, Ruth M. J. [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nacl Educ Distancia, Dept Basic Psychol 1, Madrid, Spain
[2] Univ Nacl Educ Distancia, Dept Dev & Educ Psychol, Madrid, Spain
[3] Univ La Laguna, Dept Psychol, Santa Cruz De Tenerife, Spain
[4] Univ Dublin, Trinity Coll Dublin, Sch Psychol, Dublin, Ireland
[5] Univ Dublin, Trinity Coll Dublin, Inst Neurosci, Dublin, Ireland
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 2019年 / 10卷
关键词
counterfactuals; conditionals; comprehension; visual-world-paradigm; reasoning; PROPOSITIONAL TRUTH-VALUE; TIME-COURSE; SPOKEN LANGUAGE; REAL-WORLD; INFORMATION; MOVEMENTS; IF; INFERENCES; NEGATION; WORDS;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01172
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Three experiments tracked participants' eye-movements to examine the time course of comprehension of the dual meaning of counterfactuals, such as "if there had been oranges then there would have been pears." Participants listened to conditionals while looking at images in the visual world paradigm, including an image of oranges and pears that corresponds to the counterfactual's conjecture, and one of no oranges and no pears that corresponds to its presumed facts, to establish at what point in time they consider each one. The results revealed striking individual differences: some participants looked at the negative image and the affirmative one, and some only at the affirmative image. The first experiment showed that participants who looked at the negative image increased their fixation on it within half a second. The second experiment showed they do so even without explicit instructions, and the third showed they do so even for printed words.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 74 条
  • [1] Tracking the time course of spoken word recognition using eye movements: Evidence for continuous mapping models
    Allopenna, PD
    Magnuson, JS
    Tanenhaus, MK
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 1998, 38 (04) : 419 - 439
  • [2] Qualitative differences in the representation of abstract versus concrete words: Evidence from the visual-world paradigm
    Andoni Dunabeitia, Jon
    Aviles, Alberto
    Afonso, Olivia
    Scheepers, Christoph
    Carreiras, Manuel
    [J]. COGNITION, 2009, 110 (02) : 284 - 292
  • [3] [Anonymous], 2000, PRESUMPTIVE MEANING
  • [4] A CASE-STUDY OF ANOMALY DETECTION - SHALLOW SEMANTIC PROCESSING AND COHESION ESTABLISHMENT
    BARTON, SB
    SANFORD, AJ
    [J]. MEMORY & COGNITION, 1993, 21 (04) : 477 - 487
  • [5] Children's thinking about counterfactuals and future hypotheticals as possibilities
    Beck, SR
    Robinson, EJ
    Carroll, DJ
    Apperly, IA
    [J]. CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2006, 77 (02) : 413 - 426
  • [6] Deductive reasoning with factual, possible, and counterfactual conditionals
    Byrne, RMJ
    Tasso, A
    [J]. MEMORY & COGNITION, 1999, 27 (04) : 726 - 740
  • [7] Byrne RMJ, 2005, RATIONAL IMAGINATION: HOW PEOPLE CREATE ALTERNATIVES TO REALITY, P1
  • [8] Counterfactual Thought
    Byrne, Ruth M. J.
    [J]. ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY, VOL 67, 2016, 67 : 135 - 157
  • [9] Visuospatial attention: Beyond a spotlight model
    Cave, KR
    Bichot, NP
    [J]. PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 1999, 6 (02) : 204 - 223
  • [10] CONTROL OF EYE FIXATION BY MEANING OF SPOKEN LANGUAGE - NEW METHODOLOGY FOR REAL-TIME INVESTIGATION OF SPEECH PERCEPTION, MEMORY, AND LANGUAGE PROCESSING
    COOPER, RM
    [J]. COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1974, 6 (01) : 84 - 107