Some Alternatives? Event-Related Potential Investigation of Literal and Pragmatic Interpretations of Some Presented in Isolation
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Electronic versions
Documents
- 2016 Some alternatives
Final published version, 736 KB, PDF document
Licence: CC BY Show licence
DOI
In sentence verification tasks involving under-informative statements such as Some elephants are mammals, some adults appear more tolerant to pragmatic violations than others. The underlying causes of such inter-individual variability remain however essentially unknown. Here, we investigated inter-individual variation in adults deriving the scalar inference "not all" triggered by the quantifier some. We first assessed the individual intolerance to pragmatic violations in adult participants presented with under-informative some-statements (e.g., Some infants are young). We then recorded event-related brain potentials in the same participants using an oddball paradigm where an ambiguous deviant word some presented in isolation had to be taken either as a match (in its literal interpretation "at least some") or as a mismatch (in its pragmatic interpretation "some but not all") and where an unambiguous deviant target word all was featured as control. Mean amplitude modulation of the classic P3b provided a measure of the ease with which participants considered some and all as deviants within each experimental block. We found that intolerance to pragmatic violations was associated with a reduction in the magnitude of the P3b effect elicited by the target some when it was to be considered a literal match. Furthermore, we failed to replicate a straightforward literal interpretation facilitation effect in our experiment which offers a control for task demands. We propose that the derivation of scalar inferences also relies on general, but flexible, mismatch resolution processes.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 1479 |
Pages (from-to) | 1479 |
Number of pages | 19 |
Journal | Frontiers in Psychology |
Volume | 7 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 30 Sept 2016 |