Briner, S. W., Virtue, S., & Kurby, C. A. (2011). Processing causality in narrative events: Temporal order matters. Discourse Processes, 49(1), 61-77.

Briner, S.; Virtue, S.; Kurby, C.

2011

Briner, S. W., Virtue, S., & Kurby, C. A. (2011). Processing causality in narrative events: Temporal order matters. Discourse Processes, 49(1), 61-77.

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To successfully comprehend narrative text, readers often make inferences about different causes and effects that occur in a text. In this study, participants read texts in which events related to a cause were presented before an effect (i.e., the forward causal condition), texts in which an effect was presented before the events related to a cause (i.e., the backward causal condition), or control (i.e., the non-causal) texts. Lexical decision response times to cause-relevant words were faster in the forward causal condition than in the control condition and were faster in the backward causal condition than in the control condition. Importantly, response times were faster in the forward causal condition than in the backward causal condition. These effects were unrelated to individual differences in reading ability. These results suggest that readers process causal relations regardless of temporal order but that causal events presented in backward temporal order may be processed more slowly compared to causal events presented in forward temporal order.



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