The Japanese Journal of Educational Psychology
Online ISSN : 2186-3075
Print ISSN : 0021-5015
ISSN-L : 0021-5015
Articles
Referential Ambiguity Resolution in Sentence Comprehension :
A Developmental Study Measuring Eye Movements and Pupil Dilation
NOBUYUKI JINCHOHIROAKI OISHIREIKO MAZUKA
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2016 Volume 64 Issue 4 Pages 531-543

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Abstract

  The present study investigated whether adults and 5- and 6-year-old children could incrementally resolve referential ambiguity of adjective-noun phrases in Japanese.  Using a visual world paradigm, the experiment examined whether the proportion of participants’ gaze on the referent and their pupil dilations were affected by the timing of disambiguation (pre-nominal adjective or noun).  The results indicated that the proportion of the adults’ gazes showed a reliable effect of the timing of disambiguation, but this was not found in the results from the children.  The 6-year-olds’ pupil dilation data showed larger pupil dilations in the adjective disambiguation condition than in the noun disambiguation condition.  This suggests that the 6-year-olds also incrementally resolved the referential ambiguity.  Furthermore, the adults showed a disambiguation effect, with larger dilations for the noun disambiguations than for the adjective disambiguations.  No significant differences were observed in the data from the 5-year-olds.  These results suggest that the 6-year-olds and the adults were able to resolve referential ambiguities incrementally, but that the 6-year-olds’ eye movement control was not as fully developed as the adults’.  In addition, the results suggested that pupil dilations could be a complementary measure of on-line sentence processing.  That would be especially advantageous when experimental participants are young children.

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© 2016 The Japanese Association of Educational Psychology
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