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Breheny, Richard; Ferguson, Heather J.; Katsos, Napoleon – Cognition, 2013
There is a growing body of evidence showing that conversational implicatures are rapidly accessed in incremental utterance interpretation. To date, studies showing incremental access have focussed on implicatures related to linguistic triggers, such as "some" and "or". We discuss three kinds of on-line model that can account for this data. A model…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Perspective Taking, Eye Movements, Models
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Tamminen, Jakke; Davis, Matthew H.; Merkx, Marjolein; Rastle, Kathleen – Cognition, 2012
Accounts of memory that postulate complementary learning systems (CLS) have become increasingly influential in the field of language learning. These accounts predict that generalisation of newly learnt linguistic information to untrained contexts requires offline memory consolidation. Such generalisation should not be observed immediately after…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Memory, Task Analysis, Language Processing
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Hsu, Anne S.; Chater, Nick; Vitanyi, Paul M. B. – Cognition, 2011
There is much debate over the degree to which language learning is governed by innate language-specific biases, or acquired through cognition-general principles. Here we examine the probabilistic language acquisition hypothesis on three levels: We outline a novel theoretical result showing that it is possible to learn the exact "generative model"…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Prediction, Natural Language Processing, Language Acquisition
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Kentner, Gerrit – Cognition, 2012
Various recent studies attest that reading involves creating an implicit prosodic representation of the written text which may systematically affect the resolution of syntactic ambiguities in sentence comprehension. Research up to now suggests that implicit prosody itself depends on a partial syntactic analysis of the text, raising the question of…
Descriptors: Evidence, Sentences, Speech, Silent Reading
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Barner, David; Wood, Justin; Hauser, Marc; Carey, Susan – Cognition, 2008
Set representations are explicitly expressed in natural language. For example, many languages distinguish between sets and subsets ("all" vs. "some"), as well as between singular and plural sets ("a cat" vs. "some cats"). Three experiments explored the hypothesis that these representations are language specific, and thus absent from the conceptual…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Language Processing, Animals, Evolution
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Bernolet, Sarah; Hartsuiker, Robert J.; Pickering, Martin J. – Cognition, 2009
This study investigates the way in which speakers determine which aspects of an utterance to emphasize and how this affects the form of utterances. To do this, we ask whether the binding between emphasis and thematic roles persists between utterances. In one within-language (Dutch-Dutch) and three cross-linguistic (Dutch-English) structural…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Linguistics, Persistence, Indo European Languages
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Endress, Ansgar D.; Bonatti, Luca L. – Cognition, 2007
To learn a language, speakers must learn its words and rules from fluent speech; in particular, they must learn dependencies among linguistic classes. We show that when familiarized with a short artificial, subliminally bracketed stream, participants can learn relations about the structure of its words, which specify the classes of syllables…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Syllables, Linguistics, Models
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Finn, Amy S.; Hudson Kam, Carla L. – Cognition, 2008
We investigated whether adult learners' knowledge of phonotactic restrictions on word forms from their first language impacts their ability to use statistical information to segment words in a novel language. Adults were exposed to a speech stream where English phonotactics and phoneme co-occurrence information conflicted. A control where these…
Descriptors: Cues, Phonemic Awareness, Adult Learning, Adult Students
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Brown-Schmidt, Sarah; Konopka, Agnieszka E. – Cognition, 2008
During unscripted speech, speakers coordinate the formulation of pre-linguistic messages with the linguistic processes that implement those messages into speech. We examine the process of constructing a contextually appropriate message and interfacing that message with utterance planning in English ("the small butterfly") and Spanish ("la mariposa…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Linguistics, Educational Policy, Syntax
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Temperley, David – Cognition, 2007
Gibson's Dependency Locality Theory (DLT) [Gibson, E. 1998. "Linguistic complexity: locality of syntactic dependencies." "Cognition," 68, 1-76; Gibson, E. 2000. "The dependency locality theory: A distance-based theory of linguistic complexity." In A. Marantz, Y. Miyashita, & W. O'Neil (Eds.), "Image,…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Nouns, English, Sentence Structure
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Schon, Daniele; Boyer, Maud; Moreno, Sylvain; Besson, Mireille; Peretz, Isabelle; Kolinsky, Regine – Cognition, 2008
In previous research, Saffran and colleagues [Saffran, J. R., Aslin, R. N., & Newport, E. L. (1996). Statistical learning by 8-month-old infants. Science, 274, 1926-1928; Saffran, J. R., Newport, E. L., & Aslin, R. N. (1996). Word segmentation: The role of distributional cues. "Journal of Memory and Language," 35, 606-621.] have shown that adults…
Descriptors: Cues, Singing, Linguistics, Infants
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Papafragou, Anna; Li, Peggy; Choi, Youngon; Han, Chung-hye – Cognition, 2007
What is the relation between language and thought? Specifically, how do linguistic and conceptual representations make contact during language learning? This paper addresses these questions by investigating the acquisition of evidentiality (the linguistic encoding of information source) and its relation to children's evidential reasoning. Previous…
Descriptors: Semantics, Morphemes, Linguistics, Information Sources
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Lee, Yoonhyoung; Lee, Hanjung; Gordon, Peter C. – Cognition, 2007
The nature of the memory processes that support language comprehension and the manner in which information packaging influences online sentence processing were investigated in three experiments that used eye-tracking during reading to measure the ease of understanding complex sentences in Korean. All three experiments examined reading of embedded…
Descriptors: Verbs, Semantics, Short Term Memory, Linguistics
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Wolff, Phillip – Cognition, 2003
This research proposes a new theory of direct causation and examines how this concept plays a key role in the linguistic coding and individuation of causal events. According to the "no-intervening-cause hypothesis," a causal chain can be described by a single-clause sentence and construed as a single event if there are no intervening causers…
Descriptors: Sentences, Linguistics, Cognitive Processes, Language Processing
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Boland, Jule E; Cutler, Anne – Cognition, 1996
In some psycholinguistic models, processing is characterized by generation of multiple outputs using information from higher processing levels. Such models are considered autonomous in word recognition domain but interactive in sentence processing domain. This confusion arises not from differences between lexical and syntactic processing, but from…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistics
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