“…Indeed, over the last 70 years (Black, 1952;Howes & Osgood, 1954;Miller, 1951;Taylor, 1953), studies have explored the effects of prior linguistic context on perception and comprehension and have reliably shown that words congruent with (and more predictable from) prior context are facilitated in processing relative to less expected input. Predictable words show faster visual and auditory word recognition in lexical decision tasks (Schwanenflugel & Shoben, 1985;Fischler and Bloom, 1979), shorter fixation durations during natural reading (Staub, 2015), improved word recognition in noise (Pichora-Fuller et al, 1995), improved memory (Gordon-Salant & Fitzgibbons, 1997;Kutas, 1993;Silcox, Mickey, & Payne, 2023;Silcox & Payne, 2021), and facilitated semantic processing as revealed by recordings of event-related brain potentials (ERPs) (Kutas & Federmeier, 2011;Federmeier, 2022).…”