BASE-Publications: Abstracts
Differential age
effects on semantic and syntactic priming
Angela Friederici, Herbert Schriefers, & Ulman Lindenberger
(1998)
International Journal of
Behavioral Development, 22, 813-845
Adult age differences in the
processing of semantic and syntactic information during language comprehension
were investigated in a lexical decision task in which the target word was
preceded by a sentence fragment. Sentence fragment and target were presented
visually and made up either a correct or an incorrect sentence containing
either a semantic violation (selectional restriction violation) or a syntactic
violation (subcategorisation violation). Experiment 1 revealed a differential
age effect for the processing of syntactic, but not for the processing of
semantic violations. Experiment 2, using visually degraded targets,
demonstrated that this differential effect was independent of peripheral
processing aspects, such as visual encoding. Experiment 3 including a neutral
baseline condition revealed that the differential age effect on syntactic processing
was due to controlled rather than to automatic aspects of priming, as it was
observed for the cost component, but not for the benefit component. Experiment
4 revealed that this effect was independent of the timing parameters used for
stimulus presentation. It appears that age can have differential effects on
specific cognitive domains, such as syntax and semantics. This may be
attributable to the amount of controlled processes involved in syntactic and
semantic priming.