@inproceedings{futrell-levy-2017-noisy,
title = "Noisy-context surprisal as a human sentence processing cost model",
author = "Futrell, Richard and
Levy, Roger",
editor = "Lapata, Mirella and
Blunsom, Phil and
Koller, Alexander",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 15th Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Volume 1, Long Papers",
month = apr,
year = "2017",
address = "Valencia, Spain",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/add-emnlp-2024-awards/E17-1065/",
pages = "688--698",
abstract = "We use the noisy-channel theory of human sentence comprehension to develop an incremental processing cost model that unifies and extends key features of expectation-based and memory-based models. In this model, which we call noisy-context surprisal, the processing cost of a word is the surprisal of the word given a noisy representation of the preceding context. We show that this model accounts for an outstanding puzzle in sentence comprehension, language-dependent structural forgetting effects (Gibson and Thomas, 1999; Vasishth et al., 2010; Frank et al., 2016), which are previously not well modeled by either expectation-based or memory-based approaches. Additionally, we show that this model derives and generalizes locality effects (Gibson, 1998; Demberg and Keller, 2008), a signature prediction of memory-based models. We give corpus-based evidence for a key assumption in this derivation."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[Noisy-context surprisal as a human sentence processing cost model](https://preview.aclanthology.org/add-emnlp-2024-awards/E17-1065/) (Futrell & Levy, EACL 2017)
ACL