09:00 - 10:30
Parallel sessions 4
09:00 - 10:30
Time to Think: Adaptive Mechanisms in Language Processing
Room: HSZ - 7E02
Chair/s:
Susanne Dietrich
Language comprehension often proceeds with remarkable speed, yet successful communication depends on the ability to slow down, revise, and adapt when input is ambiguous, unexpected, or inconsistent. This symposium brings together perspectives from neuroscience, psycholinguistics, and developmental research to examine how temporal flexibility supports coherent comprehension. “Time to think” is not a failure of processing but an adaptive resource: when comprehension is challenged, listeners and readers adjust the pace of processing to integrate conflicting cues, resolve ambiguity, and update mental representations. The symposium opens with a neurobiological perspective, showing how electrophysiological activity supports the processing of acoustic and abstract temporal structures in auditory-verbal stimuli. Studies from sentence comprehension and communicative interaction demonstrate that brain activity not only synchronizes with current stimuli but also aids the management of upcoming input through temporal estimation and prediction. These processes rely on structures such as the basal ganglia and pre-SMA, providing neural scaffolding for adaptive control. Neuroimaging evidence further shows that presupposition failures engage these circuits, indicating that discourse-related reinterpretation depends on adaptive gating and slowing mechanisms. The third talk presents psycholinguistic evidence on negation and pragmatic inference. Negation is rarely purely logical; comprehenders use it as a cue for pragmatic reasoning, revising mental models and integrating contextually relevant alternatives. Less felicitous contexts increase processing time, reflecting the additional effort required to construct a coherent interpretation. Next, a developmental perspective uses eye-tracking data from children learning German and Czech. Younger children struggle to integrate multiple linguistic cues for thematic role assignment, and their ability to reanalyse heuristics depends on language-specific features, such as word order versus case marking. Finally, ambiguity resolution in discourse is examined, showing how verb causality and adjective semantics shape pronoun interpretation. Comprehenders dynamically reweight cues integrating earlier expectations. Together, the contributions illustrate how slowing down, revising, and flexibly reallocating processing resources are central to achieving robust and coherent comprehension under uncertainty.
SymposiumTalk-01
Jule Nabrotzky, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Germany
SymposiumTalk-02
Susanne Dietrich, Evolutionary Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Tübingen, Germany
SymposiumTalk-03
Francesca Capuano, University of Tübingen, Germany
SymposiumTalk-04
Anna Chromá, Institute of Psychology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic
SymposiumTalk-05
Verena C. Seibold, Evolutionary Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Tübingen, Germany