“…One-step models predict that addressee congruence effects should arise at an early stage of processing, without any principled delay as compared to the time course of morphosyntactic analysis (Clark & Carlson, 1981;Hanna et al, 2003;Jackendoff, 2002;Marslen-Wilson & Tyler, 1980;MacDonald et al, 1994;Tanenhaus & Trueswell, 1995). This early integration should appear within the first 500 ms after stimulus onset, as seen in previous ERP and eye-tracking studies (Bornkessel-Schlesewsky et al, 2013;Brown-Schmidt et al, 2008;Hanna & Tanenhaus, 2004;Hanna et al, 2003;Hanulíková & Carreiras, 2015;Heller et al, 2008;Nadig & Sedivy, 2002;Van Berkum et al, 2008). In contrast, two-step models (Fodor, 1983;Forster & Ryder, 1971;Frazier, 1987;Frazier & Clifton, 1996;Friederici, 2002;Horton & Keysar, 1996;Keysar et al, 1998) predict that addressee congruence effects should be visible only at a later stage of processing (Keysar, Barr, Balin, & Brauner, 2000;Keysar, Lin, & Barr, 2003;Lattner & Friederici, 2003), presumably resulting in a P600 effect (similar to Lattner & Friederici, 2003).…”