The influence of clause order, congruency, and probability on the processing of conditionals

Matthew Haigh, Andrew J. Stewart

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Conditional information can be equally asserted in the forms if p, then q (e.g., "if I am ill, I will miss work tomorrow") and q, if p (e.g., "I will miss work tomorrow, if I am ill"). While this type of clause order manipulation has previously been found to have no influence on the ultimate conclusions participants draw from conditional rules, we used self-paced reading to examine how it affects the real time incremental processing of everyday conditional statements. Experiment 1 revealed that clause order interacts with presuppositional congruency as readers hypothetically represent counterfactual statements. When if p, then q counterfactuals contained a presupposition that was incongruent with prior context, these statements took longer to read than when the presupposition was congruent, but for q, if p conditionals there was no such congruency effect. Experiment 2 revealed that reading times were influenced by the subjective probability of an indicative conditional regardless of clause order, with a penalty observed for low-probability statements relative to high-probability statements in both conditional clause orders. These data reveal a dissociation whereby clause order mediates the effect of suppositional congruency on reading times, but does not mediate the effect of subjective probability. © 2011 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)402-423
    Number of pages21
    JournalThinking and Reasoning
    Volume17
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Nov 2011

    Keywords

    • Clause order
    • Comprehension
    • Conditionals
    • Reasoning

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