Can Entropy Explain Successor Surprisal Effects in Reading?
- Marten van Schijndel (Johns Hopkins University)
- Tal Linzen (Johns Hopkins University)
Abstract
Human reading behavior is sensitive to surprisal: more predictable words tend to be read faster. Unexpectedly, this applies not only to the surprisal of the word that is currently being read, but also to the surprisal of upcoming (successor) words that have not been fixated yet. This finding has been interpreted as evidence that readers can extract lexical information parafoveally. Calling this interpretation into question, Angele et al. (2015) showed that successor effects appear even in contexts in which those successor words are not yet visible. They hypothesized that successor surprisal predicts reading time because it approximates the reader’s uncertainty about upcoming words. We test this hypothesis on a reading time corpus using an LSTM language model, and find that successor surprisal and entropy are independent predictors of reading time. This independence suggests that entropy alone is unlikely to be the full explanation for successor surprisal effects.
Keywords: self-paced reading, entropy, surprisal, successor effects
How to Cite:
van Schijndel, M. & Linzen, T., (2019) “Can Entropy Explain Successor Surprisal Effects in Reading?”, Society for Computation in Linguistics 2(1), 1-7. doi: https://doi.org/10.7275/qtbb-9d05
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