“…Depending on previously processed contextual information, a stimulus can be more or less expected. Decades of experimental work in expectation-based approaches to language processing (e.g., Altmann and Kamide, 1999 ; Trueswell et al, 1994 ; Elman et al, 2005 ) have shown that comprehenders draw context-based expectations about upcoming linguistic input at different levels: they build expectations for the next word (Morris, 1994 ; Ehrlich and Rayner, 1981 ; McDonald and Shillcock, 2003 ), but also for their phonological form (DeLong et al, 2005 ) and gender inflection (van Berkum et al, 2005 ), for syntactic parses (Spivey-Knowlton et al, 1993 ; MacDonald et al, 1994 ; Demberg and Keller, 2008 ), for discourse relations (Köhne and Demberg, 2013 ; Drenhaus et al, 2014 ; Rohde and Horton, 2014 ), for semantic categories (Federmeier and Kutas, 1999 ), for typical event participants (Bicknell et al, 2010 ; Matsuki et al, 2011 ), for the next referent to be mentioned (Altmann and Kamide, 1999 ), for the next event to happen in a sequence (Chwilla and Kolk, 2005 ; van der Meer et al, 2005 ; Khalkhali et al, 2012 ), and for typical implicit events (Zarcone et al, 2014 ). The effects of predictability are measurable, as expectation-matching input facilitates processing, and deviation from expectations produces an increase in processing costs.…”