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Do we map remembrances to the left/back and expectations to the right/front of a mental timeline? Space–time congruency effects with retrospective and prospective verbs.

Authors :
Maienborn, Claudia
Alex-Ruf, Simone
Eikmeier, Verena
Ulrich, Rolf
Source :
Acta Psychologica. Mar2015, Vol. 156, p168-178. 11p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Recent experimental studies have shown that people code time in terms of a mental timeline which typically runs from left to right or from back to front. Determining the cognitive function of this mental timeline for language processing, however, is still an unsettled issue. Whereas the studies of Ulrich and Maienborn (2010) and Ulrich et al. (2012) argue against an automatic activation of the mental timeline for the interpretation of tense and temporal adverbials at sentence level, Sell and Kaschak (2011) observe an automatic activation for the processing of past- and future-related sentences in small stories. The present paper reports the results of three experiments which examine the processing of sentences with retrospective and prospective verbs (e.g., to remember , to regret vs. to expect , to announce ) in present tense, which locate a second, embedded event in the past or the future. When temporal information was task-relevant, a space–time congruency effect emerged (Experiment 1). This suggests that the mental timeline is not only linked to overtly deictic linguistic material but may also be construed in a more intricate way through the compositional construction of sentence meaning. The congruency effect disappeared, however, when temporal information was task-irrelevant (Experiments 2 and 3), suggesting that the mental timeline is not functionally involved in the cognitive processing of these especially demanding two-event sentences. The results of the present study support the conclusion that the relevant factor driving an automatic activation of the mental timeline is not the number of linguistically expressed events, but might rather be the number of sentential units. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00016918
Volume :
156
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Acta Psychologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
101493856
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2014.11.006