Published April 3, 2017 | Version v1
Journal article Open

"Before" and "after": Investigating the relationship between temporal connectives and chronological ordering using event-related potentials

  • 1. University of Oxford
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. New York University Abu Dhabi

Description

Sentence-initial temporal clauses headed by before, as in "Before the scientist submitted the paper, the journal changed its policy", have been shown to elicit sustained negative-going brain potentials compared to maximally similar clauses headed by after, as in "After the scientist submitted the paper, the journal changed its policy". Such effects may be due to either one of two potential causes: before clauses may be more difficult than after clauses because they cause the two events in the sentence to be mentioned in an order opposite the order in which they actually occurred, or they may be more difficult because they are ambiguous with regard to whether the event described in the clause actually happened. The present study examined the effect of before and after clauses on sentence processing in both sentence-initial contexts, like those above, and in sentence-final contexts ("The journal changed its policy before/after the scientist submitted the paper"), where an order-of-mention account of the sustained negativity predicts a negativity for after relative to before. There was indeed such a reversal, with before eliciting more negative brain potentials than after in sentence-initial clauses but more positive in sentence-final clauses. The results suggest that the sustained negativity indexes processing costs related to comprehending events that were mentioned out of order.

Data availability

All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files or at https://osf.io/gevfz/.

Files

journal.pone.0175199.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0175199
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:6674

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Arts & Humanities Division
Department(s)
Linguistics