Large-scale replication study reveals a limit on probabilistic prediction in language comprehension.
Mante S NieuwlandStephen Politzer-AhlesEvelien HeyselaarKatrien SegaertEmily DarleyNina KazaninaSarah Von Grebmer Zu WolfsthurnFederica BartolozziVita KoganAine ItoDiane MézièreDale J BarrGuillaume A RousseletHeather J FergusonSimon Busch-MorenoXiao FuJyrki TuomainenEugenia KulakovaE Matthew HusbandDavid I DonaldsonZdenko KohútShirley-Ann RueschemeyerFalk HuettigPublished in: eLife (2018)
Do people routinely pre-activate the meaning and even the phonological form of upcoming words? The most acclaimed evidence for phonological prediction comes from a 2005 Nature Neuroscience publication by DeLong, Urbach and Kutas, who observed a graded modulation of electrical brain potentials (N400) to nouns and preceding articles by the probability that people use a word to continue the sentence fragment ('cloze'). In our direct replication study spanning 9 laboratories (N=334), pre-registered replication-analyses and exploratory Bayes factor analyses successfully replicated the noun-results but, crucially, not the article-results. Pre-registered single-trial analyses also yielded a statistically significant effect for the nouns but not the articles. Exploratory Bayesian single-trial analyses showed that the article-effect may be non-zero but is likely far smaller than originally reported and too small to observe without very large sample sizes. Our results do not support the view that readers routinely pre-activate the phonological form of predictable words.