Book contents
- Cognitive Neuroscience of Natural Language Use
- Cognitive Neuroscience of Natural Language Use
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Plates
- Figures
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- 1 Cognitive neuroscience of natural language use: introduction
- 2 fMRI methods for studying the neurobiology of language under naturalistic conditions
- 3 Why study connected speech production?
- 4 Situation models in naturalistic comprehension
- 5 Language comprehension in rich non-linguistic contexts: combining eye-tracking and event-related brain potentials
- 6 The NOLB model: a model of the natural organization of language and the brain
- 7 Towards a neurocognitive poetics model of literary reading
- 8 Putting Broca’s region into context: fMRI evidence for a role in predictive language processing
- 9 Towards a multi-brain perspective on communication in dialogue
- 10 On the generation of shared symbols
- 11 What are naturalistic comprehension paradigms teaching us about language?
- Index
4 - Situation models in naturalistic comprehension
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2015
- Cognitive Neuroscience of Natural Language Use
- Cognitive Neuroscience of Natural Language Use
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Plates
- Figures
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- 1 Cognitive neuroscience of natural language use: introduction
- 2 fMRI methods for studying the neurobiology of language under naturalistic conditions
- 3 Why study connected speech production?
- 4 Situation models in naturalistic comprehension
- 5 Language comprehension in rich non-linguistic contexts: combining eye-tracking and event-related brain potentials
- 6 The NOLB model: a model of the natural organization of language and the brain
- 7 Towards a neurocognitive poetics model of literary reading
- 8 Putting Broca’s region into context: fMRI evidence for a role in predictive language processing
- 9 Towards a multi-brain perspective on communication in dialogue
- 10 On the generation of shared symbols
- 11 What are naturalistic comprehension paradigms teaching us about language?
- Index
Summary
Reading a discourse often leads to the construction of a situation model – a mental representation of the state of affairs described by the text. Situation model construction is associated with specific behavioral and neural markers. In this chapter, we consider the following questions: How does reading that involves constructing a situation model differ from other kinds of reading? Do the behavioral and neurophysiological data support a distinction between incremental updating of situation model components and global updating by abandoning an old situation model to form a new one? Do situation models represent information about sensory and motor features in analog representational formats during normal reading for comprehension? The available results indicate that specific mechanisms underlie different forms of situation model updating, that situation model-based reading is qualitatively different from reading without forming situation models, and that readers routinely deploy perceptual and motor representations to understand features of the situations described by a narrative.
Reading is a cognitive tour de force. Just guiding the eyes to focus on the right part of the text at the right time is exquisitely complex (Rayner, Raney, & Pollatsek, 1995). Readers do this effortlessly, and also recognize complex patterns to identify letters, words, and larger units of text, parse strings of words into sentences, and recognize the meanings of words and sentences. However, to us the most striking thing about what happens when people read narrative texts is that they seem to transmute black marks on paper into vivid representations of hypothetical worlds – flashing armor and clinking swords or storming skies over sinking ships (Graesser, Golding, & Long, 1991). How does a reader accomplish such a feat? In this chapter, we focus on two more specific questions about the representations that readers construct when comprehending narratives: “How does a reader build up a representation of meaningful events from a linear string of words?” and “How are perceptual and motor features of experience captured in the representations the reader constructs?” Our account builds on a larger body of research on the construction of situation models in language comprehension. We will start with a brief introduction to situation models. (For a more extended review, see Radvansky and Zacks (2014).)
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- Cognitive Neuroscience of Natural Language Use , pp. 59 - 76Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015
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