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Title: Large-scale replication study reveals a limit on probabilistic prediction in language comprehension
Authors: Nieuwland, MS
Politzer-Ahles, S 
Heyselaar, E
Segaert, K
Darley, E
Kazanina, N
Wolfsthurn, SVGZ
Bartolozzi, F
Kogan, V
Ito, A
Mézière, D
Barr, DJ
Rousselet, GA
Ferguson, H J
Busch-Moreno, S
Fu, X
Tuomainen, J
Kulakova, E
Husband, EM
Donaldson, DI
Kohút, Z
Rueschemeyer, SA
Huettig, F
Issue Date: 2018
Source: eLife, 2018, v. 7, e33468
Abstract: Do people routinely pre-activate the meaning and even the phonological form of upcoming words? The most acclaimed evidence for phonological prediction comes from a 2005 Nature Neuroscience publication by DeLong, Urbach and Kutas, who observed a graded modulation of electrical brain potentials (N400) to nouns and preceding articles by the probability that people use a word to continue the sentence fragment (‘cloze’). In our direct replication study spanning 9 laboratories (N=334), pre-registered replication-analyses and exploratory Bayes factor analyses successfully replicated the noun-results but, crucially, not the article-results. Pre-registered single-trial analyses also yielded a statistically significant effect for the nouns but not the articles. Exploratory Bayesian single-trial analyses showed that the article-effect may be non-zero but is likely far smaller than originally reported and too small to observe without very large sample sizes. Our results do not support the view that readers routinely pre-activate the phonological form of predictable words.
Publisher: eLife Sciences Publications
Journal: eLife 
EISSN: 2050-084X
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.33468
Rights: © Copyright Nieuwland et al. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source arecredited.
The following publication Nieuwland, M. S., Politzer-Ahles, S., Heyselaar, E., Segaert, K., Darley, E., Kazanina, N., ... & Huettig, F. (2018). Large-scale replication study reveals a limit on probabilistic prediction in language comprehension. ELife, 7, e33468 is available at https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.33468
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