“…In the present study, we investigated a much studied syntactic ambiguity, namely the attachment of a relative clause to two possible noun phrases (e.g., Brysbaert & Mitchell, 1996;Cuetos & Mitchell, 1988;Desmet et al, in press;De Vincenzi & Job, 1995;Fodor, 1998;Gilboy et al, 1995;Hemforth et al, 2000;Mitchell, Cuetos, Corley, & Brysbaert, 1995;Scheepers, 2003;Traxler, Pickering, & Clifton, 1998; and see Desmet & Gibson, 2003;Gibson, Pearlmutter, Canseco-Gonzalez, & Hickok, 1996;Gibson, Pearlmutter, & Torrens, 1999;Gibson & Schü tze, 1999;Igoa, Carreiras, & Meseguer, 1998, for similar attachment ambiguities). In Experiment 1, it was shown that native Dutch speakers were more likely to produce a relative clause that attached to the higher noun phrase in the syntactic tree configuration when they had been induced to produce a high-attachment relative clause in the previous item compared to when they had been induced to produce a low-attachment relative clause in the previous item.…”