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The verb "pounce" describes a single, near-instantaneous event. Yet, we easily understand that, "For several minutes the cat pounced…" describes a situation in which multiple pounces occurred, although this interpretation is not overtly specified by the sentence's syntactic structure or by any of its individual words--a phenomenon known as "aspectual coercion." Previous psycholinguistic studies have reported processing costs in association with aspectual coercion, but the neurocognitive mechanisms giving rise to these costs remain contentious. Additionally, there is some controversy about whether readers commit to a full interpretation of the event when the aspectual information becomes available, or whether they leave it temporarily underspecified until later in the sentence. Using ERPs, we addressed these questions in a design that fully crossed context type (punctive, durative, frequentative) with verb type (punctive, durative). We found a late, sustained negativity to punctive verbs in durative contexts, but not in frequentative (e.g., explicitly iterative) contexts. This effect was distinct from the N400 in both its time course and scalp distribution, suggesting that it reflected a different underlying neurocognitive mechanism. We also found that ERPs to durative verbs were unaffected by context type. Together, our results provide strong evidence that neural activity associated with aspectual coercion is driven by the engagement of a morphosyntactically unrealized semantic operator rather than by violations of real-world knowledge, more general shifts in event representation, or event iterativity itself. More generally, our results add to a growing body of evidence that a set of late-onset sustained negativities reflect elaborative semantic processing that goes beyond simply combining the meaning of individual words with syntactic structure to arrive at a final representation of meaning.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_00638 | DOI Listing |
Neuropsychologia
October 2025
College of International Education, Dali University, Dali, China. Electronic address:
The previous studies on the mechanism of aspectual coercion processing were focused on English, Polish, and Japanese, with a lack of studies on Chinese. The present study focused on Chinese aspectual coercion, an expression of implicit time, and explored the cognitive mechanism of aspectual coercion processing in Chinese. In our experiment, we manipulated two kinds of stimulus onset asynchrony(SOA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTop Cogn Sci
July 2024
Magnetic Resonance Research Center, Yale University.
What is the nature of lexical meanings such that they can both compose with others and also appear boundless? We investigate this question by examining the compositional properties of for-time adverbial as in "Ana jumped for an hour." At issue is the source of the associated iterative reading which lacks overt morphophonological support, yet, the iteration is not disconnected from the lexical meanings in the sentence. This suggests an analysis whereby the iterative reading is the result of the interaction between lexical meanings under a specific compositional configuration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
May 2021
Department of Chinese and Bilingual Studies, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China.
This study examines whether Chinese complement coercion sentences with aspectual verbs will elicit processing difficulty during real-time comprehension. is a linguistic phenomenon in which certain verbs (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
November 2017
Institut für Maschinelle Sprachverarbeitung, Universität Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany.
Complement coercion ( →) involves a type clash between an event-selecting verb and an entity-denoting object, triggering a covert event (). Two main factors involved in complement coercion have been investigated: the semantic type of the object (event vs. entity), and the typicality of the covert event ( →).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psycholinguist Res
August 2017
German Department, Universität Tübingen, Wilhelmstraße 50, Tübingen, Germany.
Underspecification and coercion are two prominent interpretive mechanisms to account for meaning variability beyond compositionality. While there is plentiful evidence that natural language meaning constitution exploits both mechanisms, it is an open issue whether a concrete phenomenon of meaning variability is an instance of underspecification or coercion. This paper argues that this theoretical dispute can be settled experimentally.
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