S. Mouchon et al., ONLINE PROCESSING OF LINKS BETWEEN EVENTS IN NARRATIVES - STUDY OF CHILDREN AND ADULTS, Cahiers de psychologie cognitive, 14(2), 1995, pp. 171-193
Three experiments were conducted in an attempt to determine (a) whethe
r the presence of certain connectives in narrative text has an impact
on the speed at which the segment immediately following the connective
is read, and if so, (b) where that impact occurs, at the beginning, m
iddle, or end of the segment. Adults and children aged 8 and 10 were g
iven narrative texts with the same beginnings but different endings. T
he predictability of the endings was controlled. The connection betwee
n the beginning (first three statements) and ending of a given text wa
s either implicit (with no connective) or explicit (with a connective
judged to be appropriate). The texts were presented in variable length
segments (statements or phrases) so that the location where the effec
t took place could be determined. The results showed that in both chil
dren and adults, mais (but) and soudain (suddenly) caused an increase
in processing speed (reading exposure time) on the next segment, regar
dless of its size. This increase was not observed when no connective w
as used, nor with the connective apres (afterwards). These results sug
gest that connectives perform a procedural function.