An investigation into the online processing of counterfactual and indicative conditionals
The ability to represent conditional information is central to human cognition. In two self-paced
reading experiments we investigated how readers process counterfactual conditionals (e.g.,
If
Darren had been athletic, he could probably have played on the rugby team
) and indicative conditionals
(e.g.,
If Darren is athletic, he probably plays on the rugby team
). In Experiment 1 we focused on how
readers process counterfactual conditional sentences. We found that processing of the antecedent
of counterfactual conditionals was rapidly constrained by prior context (i.e., knowing whether
Darren was or was not athletic). A reading-time penalty was observed for the critical region of text
comprising the last word of the antecedent and the first word of the consequent when the information
in the antecedent did not fit with prior context. In Experiment 2 we contrasted counterfactual
conditionals with indicative conditionals. For counterfactual conditionals we found the same effect
on the critical region as we found in Experiment 1. In contrast, however, we found no evidence that
processing of the antecedent of indicative conditionals was constrained by prior context. For indicative
conditionals (but not for counterfactual conditionals), the results we report are consistent with the
suppositional account of conditionals. We propose that current theories of conditionals need to be
able to account for online processing differences between indicative and counterfactual conditionals
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