“…However, a comprehender’s specific goal will depend on the particular situation. During everyday conversation, it will often be to discern the producer’s underlying intention as conveyed by speech acts (see Brown-Schmidt, Yoon, & Ryskin, 2015; Levinson, 2003; Yoon, Koh, & Brown-Schmidt, 2012 for discussion), and there are now several studies using the visual real-world paradigm showing that the presence or absence of anticipatory eye movements can be influenced by multiple different types of information in both the discourse and non-verbal context, which can cue comprehenders towards carrying out the particular action that the producer intended them to produce (see Salverda et al, 2011; Tanenhaus, Chambers, & Hanna, 2004; Tanenhaus & Trueswell, 2006 for discussion and reviews). For example, Chambers, Tanenhaus, & Magnuson (2004) asked participants to act on spoken instructions like “Pour the egg in the bowl over the flour”, and showed that anticipatory eye movements, which reflected participants syntactic parse of the sentence, were influenced by whether or not there were pourable liquid eggs in a bowl (versus solid eggs in a bowl that were not pourable).…”