Previous studies have suggested that distinctive case marking on noun phrases reduces attraction effects in production,
i.e., the tendency to produce a verb that agrees with a nonsubject noun. An important open question is
whether attraction effects are modulated by case information in sentence comprehension. To address this question,
we conducted three attraction experiments in Armenian, a language with a rich and productive case system.
The experiments showed clear attraction effects, and they also revealed an overall role of case marking such
that participants showed faster response and reading times when the nouns in the sentence had different case.
However, we found little indication that distinctive case marking modulated attraction effects. We present a theoretical
proposal of how case and number information may be used differentially during agreement licensing in
comprehension. More generally, this work sheds light on the nature of the retrieval cues deployed when completing
morphosyntactic dependencies.