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Staub, Adrian – Cognition, 2010
It is well known that sentences containing object-extracted relative clauses (e.g., "The reporter that the senator attacked admitted the error") are more difficult to comprehend than sentences containing subject-extracted relative clauses (e.g., "The reporter that attacked the senator admitted the error"). Two major accounts of this phenomenon…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Sentences, Verbs, Eye Movements
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Staub, Adrian – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Speakers frequently make subject-verb number agreement errors in the presence of a local noun with a different number from the head of the subject phrase. A series of four experiments used a two-choice response time (RT) paradigm to investigate how the latency of correct agreement decisions is modulated by the presence of a number attractor, and…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Nouns, Syntax, Error Patterns
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Staub, Adrian; Rayner, Keith; Pollatsek, Alexander; Hyona, Jukka; Majewski, Helen – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
Readers' eye movements were monitored as they read sentences containing noun-noun compounds that varied in frequency (e.g., elevator mechanic, mountain lion). The left constituent of the compound was either plausible or implausible as a head noun at the point at which it appeared, whereas the compound as a whole was always plausible. When the head…
Descriptors: Sentences, Eye Movements, Nouns, Experiments
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Staub, Adrian – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
Two eye movement experiments examined effects on syntactic reanalysis when the correct analysis was briefly entertained at an earlier point in the sentence. In Experiment 1, participants read sentences containing a noun phrase coordination/clausal coordination ambiguity, while in Experiment 2 they read sentences containing a subordinate clause…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Sentences, Nouns, Eye Movements
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Staub, Adrian – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
Several previous studies (B. C. Adams, C. Clifton, & D. C. Mitchell, 1998; D. C. Mitchell, 1987; R. P. G. van Gompel & M. J. Pickering, 2001) have explored the question of whether the parser initially analyzes a noun phrase that follows an intransitive verb as the verb's direct object. Three eye-tracking experiments examined this issue in more…
Descriptors: Verbs, Nouns, Language Processing, Phrase Structure
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Staub, Adrian; Clifton, Charles – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Readers' eye movements were monitored as they read sentences in which two noun phrases or two independent clauses were connected by the word or (NP-coordination and S-coordination, respectively). The word either could be present or absent earlier in the sentence. When either was present, the material immediately following or was read more quickly,…
Descriptors: Nouns, Eye Movements, Sentence Structure, Reading Processes