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Predicting (in)correctly: listeners rapidly use unexpected information to revise their predictions ...
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Abstract:
Comprehenders can incorporate rich contextual information to predict upcoming input on the fly and they can detect cues that conflict with their predictions very quickly. However, to date little is known about whether and how listeners use unexpected information to revise their existing predictions. Here we took advantage of the rich classifier system in Mandarin Chinese to examine whether and how comprehenders update their noun prediction upon encountering an unexpected classifier. We present evidence from a visual world eye-tracking experiment which suggests that listeners can quickly use prediction-mismatching classifiers to revise their predictions. ...
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Keyword:
CUNY2018; poster
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URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/q35sw https://osf.io/q35sw/
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Listeners rapidly use unexpected information to update their predictions: Evidence from eye-movements. ...
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Wait a second! Delayed impact of argument roles on on-line verb prediction ...
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Effects of Subject-Case Marking on Agreement Processing: ERP evidence from Basque ...
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Eye-tracking evidence for active gap-filling regardless of dependency length ...
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The Relationship Between Anaphor Features and Antecedent Retrieval: Comparing Mandarin Ziji and Ta-Ziji
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In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2016)
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Additive Effects of Repetition and Predictability during Comprehension: Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
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