scholarly journals Cost of ungrammatical predictions during online sentence processing: evidence against surprisal

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Apurva Apurva ◽  
Samar Husain

The surprisal metric (Hale, 2001; Levy, 2008) successfully predicts syntactic complexity in a large number of online studies (e.g., Demberg and Keller, 2009; Levy and Keller, 2013). Surprisal assumes a probabilistic grammar that drives the expectation of upcoming linguistic material. Consequently, wrong predictions lead to a processing cost, presumably due to reranking related computations (Levy, 2013). Critically, surprisal assumes that the predicted parses generated by the probabilistic grammar are grammatical. However, it has been found that syntactic predictions can be ungrammatical (e.g., Apurva & Husain, 2018). Consequently, similar to reranking costs incurred due to incorrect (grammatical) predictions, a cost should also appear for ungrammatical predictions. Evidence for such a cost during comprehension will not be explained by the surprisal metric. To test the ecological validity of the surprisal metric, it becomes critical to investigate if ungrammatical predictions incur a cost. In this study, we investigate this issue in Hindi (a verb-final language) using a cloze task followed by a self-paced reading (SPR) study. All analyses were carried out in R using linear mixed models. Log RTs (reading time) were used for the RT analyses. In the cloze study (N=30), participants were asked to complete the sentences (such as 1a, 1b) meaningfully using the SPR paradigm. The two conditions differed in the case markers on the three nouns. 12 sets of experimental items along with 64 fillers were used. Participants’ responses were coded for the predicted verb class and the overall grammaticality of the completion (grammatical prediction vs ungrammatical prediction). 1a. hari-ne geeta-se umesh-ko…. Hari-ERG Geeta=ABL Umesh=ACC. 1b. hari-ko geeta-ne umesh-ko …. Hari-ACC Geeta-ERG Umesh-ACC. Grammaticality analysis of the completion data showed that participants make more ungrammatical completions in conditions (b) compared to (a) (z=5.25). The overall grammatical completions in condition (a) was 96% while in (b) it was 60%. In addition, the verb class analysis showed that in both conditions participants completed the sentences with a transitive non-finite verb followed by a ditransitive matrix verb (hereafter T.NF-DT.M) most frequently. T.NF-DT.M were predicted in 33% instance in condition (a) and 34% in condition (b) (z=0.18). Given the similar cloze probabilities, the surprisal metric will predict no difference in RT at T.NF-DT.M in the two conditions during online processing (cloze probabilities can be used to compute surprisal, see Levy and Keller, 2013). If the RTs at T.NF-DT.M in condition (a) is less than (b) that would be better explained by the higher cost due to the ungrammatical prediction. To ascertain this, we conducted an SPR study (n=50) using items similar to the ones used in the previous experiment (see, 2a and 2b). The critical region was T.NF-DT.M. 24 set of items along with 72 fillers were constructed. 2a hari-ne geeta-se umesh-ko milne ko kaha, Hari-ERG Geeta=ABL Umesh=ACC meet-inf(T.NF) told(DT.M) 2b hari-ko geeta-ne umesh-ko milne ko kaha , ... Hari-ACC Geeta=ERG Umesh=ACC meet-inf(T.NF) told(DT.M) While the prediction of T.NF-DT.M is the same in the two conditions, % ungrammatical predictions are more in (b) vs (a). Results show that the RT in (a) < (b) at the critical region (t=2.32). This goes against the surprisal metric and shows the cost incurred due to ungrammatical predictions. Our work establishes that the cost of ungrammatical predictions indeed appears during online processing. This processing cost is not predicted by a metric like surprisal and highlights its limitations. This study also provides evidence against the robust predictions in head-final languages. It suggests that the prediction mechanism in such languages is more nuanced and points to the need to study the nature of ungrammatical predictions during processing.

Author(s):  
Masaya Yoshida

In order to successfully comprehend sentences involving ellipsis, the online sentence-processing mechanism must be able to identify the ellipsis site, find its antecedent, and recover the content of the ellipsis site by referring to the antecedent. The psycholinguistic study of ellipsis aims to reveal aspects of the mechanism of online sentence processing by studying how ellipsis constructions are processed online. In this chapter, the following questions are asked. What structure does the parser build in the ellipsis site? How does the parser build the structure of ellipsis? When does the parser recognize ellipsis? Where does the parser find the antecedent of ellipsis? By answering these questions, this chapter tries to reveal what parsing strategies are employed in the online processing of ellipsis constructions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 121-126 ◽  
pp. 3612-3616
Author(s):  
Wen Quan Huang ◽  
Kai Shi Li ◽  
Hai Jun Liu

This paper adopts the method labor time standard, in the development environment of VC++, using Access database storage costs data, and the cost results output into Excel, developed mechanical product turning processing manufacturing cost estimation system. Using this system can realize turning processing cost estimation and feedback the cost information of mechanical product turning processing, make a design personnel to understand the cost information, to improve design, reduce the cost, improve the market competitiveness of products


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 3084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyoungsoo Bok ◽  
Daeyun Kim ◽  
Jaesoo Yoo

As a large amount of stream data are generated through sensors over the Internet of Things environment, studies on complex event processing have been conducted to detect information required by users or specific applications in real time. A complex event is made by combining primitive events through a number of operators. However, the existing complex event-processing methods take a long time because they do not consider similarity and redundancy of operators. In this paper, we propose a new complex event-processing method considering similar and redundant operations for stream data from sensors in real time. In the proposed method, a similar operation in common events is converted into a virtual operator, and redundant operations on the same events are converted into a single operator. The event query tree for complex event detection is reconstructed using the converted operators. Through this method, the cost of comparison and inspection of similar and redundant operations is reduced, thereby decreasing the overall processing cost. To prove the superior performance of the proposed method, its performance is evaluated in comparison with existing methods.


2003 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diane Pecher ◽  
René Zeelenberg ◽  
Lawrence W. Barsalou

According to perceptual symbol systems, sensorimotor simulations underlie the representation of concepts. It follows that sensorimotor phenomena should arise in conceptual processing. Previous studies have shown that switching from one modality to another during perceptual processing incurs a processing cost. If perceptual simulation underlies conceptual processing, then verifying the properties of concepts should exhibit a switching cost as well. For example, verifying a property in the auditory modality (e.g., BLENDER-loud) should be slower after verifying a property in a different modality (e.g., CRANBERRIES-tart) than after verifying a property in the same modality (e.g., LEAVES-rustling). Only words were presented to subjects, and there were no instructions to use imagery. Nevertheless, switching modalities incurred a cost, analogous to the cost of switching modalities in perception. A second experiment showed that this effect was not due to associative priming between properties in the same modality. These results support the hypothesis that perceptual simulation underlies conceptual processing.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 494-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
OLIVER BOXELL ◽  
CLAUDIA FELSER

We report the results from an eye-movement monitoring study that investigated late German–English bilinguals’ sensitivity to parasitic gaps inside subject islands. The online reading experiment was complemented by an offline scalar judgement task. The results from the offline task confirmed that for both native and non-native speakers, subject island environments must normally be non-finite in order to host a parasitic gap. The analysis of the reading-time data showed that, while native speakers posited parasitic gaps in non-finite environments only, the non-native group initially overgenerated parasitic gaps, showing delayed sensitivity to island-inducing cues during online processing. Taken together, our findings show that non-native comprehenders are sensitive to exceptions to island constraints that are not attested in their native language and also rare in the L2 input. They need more time than native comprehenders to compute the linguistic representations over which the relevant restrictions are defined, however.


2002 ◽  
Vol 323 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel C.M. Bastiaansen ◽  
Jos J.A. van Berkum ◽  
Peter Hagoort

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 636-643 ◽  
Author(s):  
LUCIA POZZAN ◽  
JOHN C. TRUESWELL

We asked whether children's well-known difficulties revising initial sentence processing commitments characterize the immature or the learning parser. Adult L2 speakers of English acted out temporarily ambiguous and unambiguous instructions. While online processing patterns indicate that L2 adults experienced garden-paths and were sensitive to referential information to a similar degree as native adults, their act-out patterns indicate increased difficulties revising initial interpretations, at rates similar to those observed for 5-year-old native children (e.g., Trueswell, Sekerina, Hill & Logrip, 1999). We propose that L2 learners’ difficulties with revision stem from increased recruitment of cognitive control networks during processing of a not fully proficient language, resulting in the reduced availability of cognitive control for parsing revisions.


Author(s):  
Min-Long Wang ◽  
Xin-Tian Liu ◽  
Yan-Song Wang ◽  
Xiao-Lan Wang ◽  
Hui Guo ◽  
...  

The enhancement between cost and reliability is the developmental direction of modern manufacturing enterprises. On the basis of fuzzy theory, the relationship among the cost of product quality loss, the reliability of the assembly dimension chain and assembly tolerance is studied together in this article. Processing cost can be considerably reduced and the target of quality engineering is realized by optimization design. As an example, a tolerance design model is determined for gear and shaft assembly. Moreover, the mathematical model of the relationship between the cost of fuzzy quality loss and the fuzzy reliability of the assembly dimension chain is determined in combination with a processing cost function. The optimistic results of key dimensions of gear and shaft assembly are identified through through orthogonal experiments. This method can facilitate product quality control by enterprises and the realization of economic targets. The study findings can also serve as references for other similar studies.


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