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A New Test of Irony and Indirect Requests Comprehension—The IRRI Test: Validation and Normative Data in French-Speaking Adults
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In: ISSN: 0887-6177 ; Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03337764 ; Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021, ⟨10.1093/arclin/acab043⟩ (2021)
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Differential impairments in irony comprehension in brain-damaged individuals: Insight from contextual processing, theory of mind, and executive functions.
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In: ISSN: 0894-4105 ; Neuropsychology ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02996068 ; Neuropsychology, American Psychological Association, 2020, 34 (7), pp.750-763. ⟨10.1037/neu0000682⟩ (2020)
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The Nonverbal Processing of Actions Is an Area of Relative Strength in the Semantic Variant of Primary Progressive Aphasia
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Troubles de la production écrite dans la variante sémantique de l’aphasie primaire progressive : caractérisation des processus altérés et recommandations thérapeutiques
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Context processing during irony comprehension in right-frontal brain-damaged individuals
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In: ISSN: 0269-9206 ; EISSN: 1464-5076 ; Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01735621 ; Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, Taylor & Francis, 2018, pp.1 - 18. ⟨10.1080/02699206.2018.1430851⟩ (2018)
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Referential Choices in a Collaborative Storytelling Task: Discourse Stages and Referential Complexity Matter
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In: ISSN: 1664-1078 ; Frontiers in Psychology ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01735602 ; Frontiers in Psychology, Frontiers, 2018, 9, pp.176. ⟨10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00176⟩ (2018)
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Knowledge likely held by others affects speakers’ choices of referential expressions at different stages of discourse
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Développement de la version québécoise francophone du Children’s Communication Checklist – 2 (CCC-2) : Normalisation et équivalence métrique
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Context processing during irony comprehension in right-frontal brain-damaged individuals
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Inflectional Morphology in Fluent Aphasia: A Case Study in a Highly Inflected Language
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Les troubles morphologiques flexionnels dans la maladie de Parkinson : origine procédurale et/ou exécutive ?
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Inter-individual variability in discourse informativeness in elderly populations
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Melodic Intonation Therapy dans la prise en charge logopédique de l'aphasie chez l'adulte: une recension systématique
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Production of morphologically derived words in the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia: preserved decomposition and composition but impaired validation
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Toward an Executive Origin for Acquired Phonological Dyslexia: A Case of Specific Deficit of Context-Sensitive Grapheme-to-Phoneme Conversion Rules
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Indirect anaphora in English and French: A cross-linguistic study of pronoun resolution
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Referential Choices in a Collaborative Storytelling Task: Discourse Stages and Referential Complexity Matter
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The role of Basal Ganglia in Language Production: evidence from Parkinson's disease
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Referential Choices in a Collaborative Storytelling Task: Discourse Stages and Referential Complexity Matter
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Abstract:
During a narrative discourse, accessibility of the referents is rarely fixed once and for all. Rather, each referent varies in accessibility as the discourse unfolds, depending on the presence and prominence of the other referents. This leads the speaker to use various referential expressions to refer to the main protagonists of the story at different moments in the narrative. This study relies on a new, collaborative storytelling in sequence task designed to assess how speakers adjust their referential choices when they refer to different characters at specific discourse stages corresponding to the introduction, maintaining, or shift of the character in focus, in increasingly complex referential contexts. Referential complexity of the stories was manipulated through variations in the number of characters (1 vs. 2) and, for stories in which there were two characters, in their ambiguity in gender (different vs. same gender). Data were coded for the type of reference markers as well as the type of reference content (i.e., the extent of the information provided in the referential expression). Results showed that, beyond the expected effects of discourse stages on reference markers (more indefinite markers at the introduction stage, more pronouns at the maintaining stage, and more definite markers at the shift stage), the number of characters and their ambiguity in gender also modulated speakers' referential choices at specific discourse stages, For the maintaining stage, an effect of the number of characters was observed for the use of pronouns and of definite markers, with more pronouns when there was a single character, sometimes replaced by definite expressions when two characters were present in the story. For the shift stage, an effect of gender ambiguity was specifically noted for the reference content with more specific information provided in the referential expression when there was referential ambiguity. Reference content is an aspect of referential marking that is rarely addressed in a narrative context, yet it revealed a quite flexible referential behavior by the speakers.
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Keyword:
Psychology
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URL: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00176 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5826302/
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