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Efficient adaptation to listener proficiency: The case of referring expressions
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In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, vol 43, iss 43 (2021)
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Efficient adaptation to listener proficiency: The case of referring expressions ...
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What to talk about, and how: studies on prominence and patterns of coreference
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Anatomy of dialogue in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest resuscitation
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Beyond words: non-linguistic signals and the recovery of meaning
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Lifelong interplay between language and cognition: from language learning to perspective-taking, new insights into the ageing mind
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Intersentential coreference expectations reflect mental models of events
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Contrastive prosody and the subsequent mention of alternatives during discourse processing
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Abstract:
Linguistic research has long viewed prosody as an important indicator of information structure in intonationally rich languages like English. Correspondingly, numerous psycholinguistic studies have shown significant effects of prosody, particularly with respect to the immediate processing of a prosodically prominent phrase. Although co-reference resolution is known to be influenced by information structure, it has been less clear whether prosodic prominence can affect decisions about next mention in a discourse, and if so, how. We present results from an open-ended story continuation task, conducted as part of a series of experiments that examine how prosody influences the anticipation and resolution of co-reference. Overall results from the project suggest that prosodic prominence can increase or decrease reference to a saliently pitch-accented phrase, depending on additional circumstances of the referential decision. We argue that an adequate account of prosody’s role in co-reference requires consideration of how the processing system interfaces with multiple levels of linguistic representation.
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Keyword:
Anaphora (Linguistics); English language--Intonation; Focus (Linguistics); Prosodic analysis (Linguistics)
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10125/56606
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Cues to Lying May be Deceptive: Speaker and Listener Behaviour in an Interactive Game of Deception
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Explicit Discourse Connectives / Implicit Discourse Relations
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In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2018)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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Order and structure in syntax I: Word order and syntactic structure
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In: Language Science Press; (2017)
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