Fodor (1983) has claimed that informational encapsulation
of the parser is the way the language system prevents extralinguistic factors firom slowing down first pass processing.
However, in a naming task where the visual probe was an appropriate or inappropriate pronoun continuation to a gerundive
phrase following passages in which discourse focus and verb
semantics were co-varied (Marslen-Wilson, Tyler & Koster,
1993) we found appropriateness effects which suggest a role
for on-line pragmatic inference in top down control of the
parser. Fodor, Garret & Swinney (1993) maintain that, though
the gerund is marked as requiring a subject NP, the inferential
activity underlying referent assignment does not occur until an
explicit anaphor (the pronoun target) is encountered. As modularity predicts a cost associated with contacting real world
information, assignment times to gerunds should take longer
than assignments based on lexical information. A speeded fragment completion task was used to counter Fodor's objection to
a pronoun probe and to detect differences in the times taken to
make anaphor assignments. The two studies reported here used
the original Marslen-Wilson et al. (1993) materials. Conect
assignments in the gerundive condition ("Rurming towards...")
were cost free with the exception of the condition where the
pragmatically most likely subject was not in discourse focus.
Latencies to initiate a completion were otherwise similar regardless of whether the to-be-completed fragment contained
a gerund or a disambiguating pronoun. Furthermore, in the
absence of pragmatic constraints, assignment always favoured
the highlighted entity. These results reproduce the critical data
from the Marslen-Wilson et al. (1993) study which demonstrates context effects on first pass processing.