Verbs' implicit causality in coreference and coherence processing during L2 comprehension

The existing psycholinguistic research suggests that verbs' implicit causality (IC) elicits two types of bias: a coreference bias , which favors re-mentioning the causally implicated entity of the event ( she = Mary in Mary annoyed Lisa because she . ..), and a coherence bias , which leads spea...

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Published inFrontiers in language sciences Vol. 4
Main Author Hosoda, Masaya
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 09.04.2025
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ISSN2813-4605
2813-4605
DOI10.3389/flang.2025.1494500

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Abstract The existing psycholinguistic research suggests that verbs' implicit causality (IC) elicits two types of bias: a coreference bias , which favors re-mentioning the causally implicated entity of the event ( she = Mary in Mary annoyed Lisa because she . ..), and a coherence bias , which leads speakers to expect an explanation in the upcoming discourse ( Mary annoyed Lisa is continued with Mary sang loudly ). Of these two biases, previous second-language (L2) studies have predominantly focused on coreference bias in contexts where an upcoming explanation is explicitly signaled ( Mary annoyed Lisa because .. .). The present study advances the L2 literature by examining both coherence and coreference biases in L2 comprehension. Eye-tracking and story-continuation experiments revealed that L2 learners are fundamentally weaker than native speakers in terms of coherence bias. As a result, an upcoming explanation must be explicitly signaled for IC to trigger coreference bias during online L2 processing. The findings suggest that while the underlying mechanism of IC bias functions similarly in both L1 and L2 comprehension, there is a pronounced L1–L2 difference in the ease with which an implicit explanation relation can be activated through expectation-based processing. The findings are discussed in terms of the source and time course of IC, as well as theoretical accounts of L2 prediction.
AbstractList The existing psycholinguistic research suggests that verbs' implicit causality (IC) elicits two types of bias: a coreference bias , which favors re-mentioning the causally implicated entity of the event ( she = Mary in Mary annoyed Lisa because she . ..), and a coherence bias , which leads speakers to expect an explanation in the upcoming discourse ( Mary annoyed Lisa is continued with Mary sang loudly ). Of these two biases, previous second-language (L2) studies have predominantly focused on coreference bias in contexts where an upcoming explanation is explicitly signaled ( Mary annoyed Lisa because .. .). The present study advances the L2 literature by examining both coherence and coreference biases in L2 comprehension. Eye-tracking and story-continuation experiments revealed that L2 learners are fundamentally weaker than native speakers in terms of coherence bias. As a result, an upcoming explanation must be explicitly signaled for IC to trigger coreference bias during online L2 processing. The findings suggest that while the underlying mechanism of IC bias functions similarly in both L1 and L2 comprehension, there is a pronounced L1–L2 difference in the ease with which an implicit explanation relation can be activated through expectation-based processing. The findings are discussed in terms of the source and time course of IC, as well as theoretical accounts of L2 prediction.
The existing psycholinguistic research suggests that verbs' implicit causality (IC) elicits two types of bias: a coreference bias, which favors re-mentioning the causally implicated entity of the event (she = Mary in Mary annoyed Lisa because she. ..), and a coherence bias, which leads speakers to expect an explanation in the upcoming discourse (Mary annoyed Lisa is continued with Mary sang loudly). Of these two biases, previous second-language (L2) studies have predominantly focused on coreference bias in contexts where an upcoming explanation is explicitly signaled (Mary annoyed Lisabecause...). The present study advances the L2 literature by examining both coherence and coreference biases in L2 comprehension. Eye-tracking and story-continuation experiments revealed that L2 learners are fundamentally weaker than native speakers in terms of coherence bias. As a result, an upcoming explanation must be explicitly signaled for IC to trigger coreference bias during online L2 processing. The findings suggest that while the underlying mechanism of IC bias functions similarly in both L1 and L2 comprehension, there is a pronounced L1–L2 difference in the ease with which an implicit explanation relation can be activated through expectation-based processing. The findings are discussed in terms of the source and time course of IC, as well as theoretical accounts of L2 prediction.
Author Hosoda, Masaya
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Snippet The existing psycholinguistic research suggests that verbs' implicit causality (IC) elicits two types of bias: a coreference bias , which favors re-mentioning...
The existing psycholinguistic research suggests that verbs' implicit causality (IC) elicits two types of bias: a coreference bias, which favors re-mentioning...
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SubjectTerms coherence relations
coreference processing
expectation-based processing
eye-tracking
implicit causality
L2 processing
Title Verbs' implicit causality in coreference and coherence processing during L2 comprehension
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