Cognitive Mechanisms in Sentence Processing: Exploring Adaptability and Flexibility in Ungrammatical Sentence Comprehension through Syntactic Priming and Repeated Exposure
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2025-05-21
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Understanding how humans process and adapt to linguistic irregularities provides
insight into the flexibility of the cognitive language system. This thesis investigates the
cognitive mechanisms underlying the comprehension of ungrammatical sentences,
focusing on syntactic priming, repeated exposure, and linguistic adaptability across
native and non-native speakers. Building on the "Good Enough" model of sentence
processing and theories of sentence acceptability, this research examines how exposure
to ungrammatical structures influences language processing and how proficiency and
contextual factors modulate these effects.
Through a series of experiments, this work explores the role of repeated exposure in
adapting to grammatical anomalies, revealing the processing system’s capacity to learn
from linguistic variability. Additionally, it evaluates the impact of syntactic priming on
the comprehension of structurally similar ungrammatical sentences, highlighting the
influence of lexical overlap and thematic roles. Comparing native and non-native
speakers provides insights into how linguistic proficiency shapes adaptability and
resilience in managing grammatical violations.
By integrating findings from eye-tracking, self-paced reading, and acceptability
judgment tasks, this thesis demonstrates the robust and dynamic nature of the human
language processing system. The results contribute to our understanding of how
cognitive mechanisms accommodate ungrammatical input, offering broader
implications for psycholinguistics, second
Description
Keywords
Cognitive Mechanisms, Sentence Processing, Syntactic Priming, Repeated Exposure