Cognitive Science of Language
The ‘Good Enough’ Approach to Language Comprehension
By and , University of Edinburgh (March 2007)
Section: Cognitive Science of Language
Subjects: Linguistics, Psycholinguistics, Computational Linguistics, Natural Language Processing.
Abstract
Ferreira and colleagues argued that the language comprehension system creates syntactic and semantic representations that are merely ‘good enough’ (GE) given the task that the comprehender needs to perform. GE representations contrast with ones that are detailed, complete, and accurate with respect to the input. In this article, we review the original argument for GE processing, and we present new evidence that supports the concept: first, local interpretations are computed, which can interfere with global ones; second, new findings based on the recording of event-related potentials show the use of simple heuristics rather than compositional algorithms for constructing sentence meaning; and recent studies show that the comprehension system has mechanisms for handling disfluencies, but they work imperfectly. We argue that the GE approach to language comprehension is similar to the use of fast and frugal heuristics for decision-making, and that future research should explore this connection more thoroughly.
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-818X.2007.00007.x
This article abstract has been viewed 5013 times.
Top 5 related articles
-
Quantifiers and Discourse Processing
By , and , University of Leicester, University of Nottingham and University of Glasgow
(Vol. 3, October 2009)
Language and Linguistics Compass -
Sentence Parsing in a Morphologically Rich Language – Finnish
By and , University of Turku
(Vol. 3, March 2009)
Language and Linguistics Compass -
Mismatching Meanings in Brain and Behavior
By , New York University
(Vol. 2, June 2008)
Language and Linguistics Compass -
Development of Executive Control and Language Processing
By , and , RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan and Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, Duke University
(Vol. 3, January 2009)
Language and Linguistics Compass -
Parallelism and Competition in Syntactic Ambiguity Resolution
By and , University of Massachusetts
(Vol. 2, March 2008)
Language and Linguistics Compass