This paper, which also depends heavily on the amazing capabilities of Stan, investigates the quantitative predictions of two competing models of retrieval processes, the cue-based retrieval model of Lewis and Vasishth, and the direct-access model of McElree. We have done such an investigation before, in a very exciting paper by Bruno Nicenboim, using self-paced reading data from a German number interference experiment.
What is interesting about this new paper by Paula is that the data come from individuals with aphasia and control participants. Such data is extremely difficult to collect, and as a result many papers report experimental results from a handful of people with aphasia, sometimes as few as 7 people. This paper has much more data, thanks to the hard work of David Caplan.
The big achievements of this paper are that it provides a principled approach to comparing the two competing models' predictions, and it derives testable predictions (which we are about to evaluate with new data from German individuals with aphasia---watch this space). As is always the case in psycholinguistics, even with this relatively large data-set, there just isn't enough data to draw unequivocal inferences. Our policy in my lab is to be upfront about the ambiguities inherent in the inferences. This kind of ambiguous conclusion tends to upset reviewers, because they expect (rather, demand) big-news results. But big news is, more often than not, just illusions of certainty, noise that looks like a signal (see some of my recent papers in the Journal of Memory and Language). We could easily have over-dramatized the paper and dressed it up to say way more than is warranted by the analyses. Our goal here was to tell the story with all its uncertainties laid bare. The more papers one can put out there that make more measured claims, with all the limitations laid out openly, the easier it will be for reviewers (and editors!) to learn to accept that one can learn something important from a modeling exercise without necessarily obtaining a decisive result.
Download the paper from here: https://psyarxiv.com/r7dn5
A computational evaluation of two models of retrieval processes in sentence processing in aphasia
Abstract:
Can sentence comprehension impairments in aphasia be explained by
difficulties arising from dependency completion processes in parsing?
Two distinct models of dependency
completion difficulty are investigated, the Lewis and Vasishth (2005)
activation-based model, and the direct-access model (McElree, 2000).
These models’ predictive performance is compared using data from
individuals with aphasia (IWAs) and control participants. The data are
from a self-paced listening task involving subject and object relative
clauses. The relative predictive performance of the models is evaluated
using k-fold cross validation. For both IWAs and controls, the
activation model furnishes a somewhat better quantitative
fit to the data than the direct-access model. Model comparison using
Bayes factors shows that, assuming an activation-based model,
intermittent deficiencies may be the best explanation for the cause of
impairments in IWAs. This is the first computational evaluation of
different models of dependency completion using data from impaired and
unimpaired individuals. This evaluation develops a systematic approach
that can be used to quantitatively compare the predictions of competing
models of language processing.
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