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Data for: Is buttercup a kind of cup? Hyponymy and semantic transparency in compound words ...
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Data for: Is buttercup a kind of cup? Hyponymy and semantic transparency in compound words ...
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A Neurolinguistic Approach to Noncompositionality and Argument Structure
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Data for: What do you know? ERP evidence for immediate use of common ground during online reference resolution ...
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Data for: What do you know? ERP evidence for immediate use of common ground during online reference resolution ...
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Entrainment in Disguise: the Exogenous and Endogenous Cortical Rhythms of Speech and Language Processing ...
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When a second language hits a native language. What ERPs (do and do not) tell us about language retrieval difficulty in bilingual language production. ...
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Advance planning in written and spoken sentence production ...
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Children’s use of polysemy to structure new word meanings ...
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Multiplex model of mental lexicon reveals explosive learning in humans ...
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Getting a Grip on Sensorimotor Effects in Lexical-Semantic Processing ...
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Nonword repetition depends on the frequency of sublexical representations at different grain sizes: evidence from a multi-factorial analysis ...
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Do current statistical learning capture stable individual differences in children? An investigation of task reliability across modalities ...
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English Resumptive Pronouns are More Common where Gaps are Less Acceptable ...
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Abstract:
English resumptive pronouns, as in "...the flowers that I don't know where IT came from," are enigmatic in that they are judged to be unacceptable, which would indicate that they are ungrammatical, but are regularly produced by native speakers, which is typically taken to indicate grammaticality. We report results from two studies: an acceptability judgment study on sentences with resumptive pronouns or gaps ("...the flowers that I don't know where _came from"), and a written production study which elicited sentences that required participants to produce either a gap or a resumptive pronoun in various island and non-island domains. We find that, in a given structure, resumptive pronouns are produced at a rate that negatively correlates with the acceptability of the corresponding structure with a gap in it. That is, where gaps are less acceptable, resumptive pronouns are more common. To account for these data, we offer a model of English production processes as sensitive to the acceptability of a planned ...
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Keyword:
Cognitive Psychology; FOS Languages and literature; FOS Psychology; Linguistics; Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics; Psychology; Social and Behavioral Sciences
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URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/8mtsz https://osf.io/8mtsz/
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The multiplex structure of the mental lexicon influences picture naming in people with aphasia ...
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