Altmann, G. T. M. & Kamide, Y. (1999). Incremental interpretation at verbs: Restricting the domain of subsequent reference. Cognition, 73, 247-264.
Participants eye movements were recorded as they inspected a semi-realistic
visual scene showing a boy, a cake, and various distractor objects. Whilst viewing
this scene, they heard sentences such as the boy will move the cake
or the boy will eat the cake. The cake was the only edible object
portrayed in the scene. In each of two experiments, the onset of saccadic eye
movements to the target object (the cake) was significantly later in the move
condition than in the eat condition; saccades to the target were launched after
the onset of the spoken word cake in the move condition, but before its onset
in the eat condition. The results suggest that information at the verb can be
used to restrict the domain within the context to which subsequent reference
will be made by the (as yet unencountered) post-verbal grammatical object. The
data support a hypothesis in which sentence processing is driven by the predictive
relationships between verbs, their syntactic arguments, and the real-world contexts
in which they occur.