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A Bayesian Approach to German Personal and Demonstrative Pronouns
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In: Front Psychol (2022)
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Pronoun interpretation in Mandarin Chinese follows principles of Bayesian inference
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In: PLoS (2021)
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Pronoun interpretation in Mandarin Chinese follows principles of Bayesian inference
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In: PLoS One (2020)
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Reconsidering asymmetries in voice-mismatched VP-ellipsis
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In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 4, No 1 (2019); 60 ; 2397-1835 (2019)
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On QUD-based Licensing of Strict and Sloppy Ambiguities
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In: Semantics and Linguistic Theory; Proceedings of SALT 25; 512-532 ; 2163-5951 (2016)
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On the Presuppositional Behavior of Coherence-Driven Pragmatic Enrichments
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In: Semantics and Linguistic Theory; Proceedings of SALT 26; 961-979 ; 2163-5951 (2016)
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A probabilistic reconciliation of coherence-driven and centering-driven theories of pronoun interpretation
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IDS Mannheim
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Verb aspect, event structure, and coreferential processing
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Abstract:
We used an off-line story continuation task and an online ERP reading task to investigate coreferential processing following sentences that portrayed transfer-of-possession events as either ongoing or completed, using imperfective and perfective verb aspect (e.g., Amanda was shifting/shifted some poker chips to Scott). The story continuation task demonstrated that people were more likely to begin continuations with references to the Goal than to the Source, but that perfective aspect strengthened this bias. In the ERP task we probed expectations for Source and Goal referents by employing pronouns that matched one of the referents in gender. The ERP results were consistent with the biases revealed in the story continuation task and demonstrate that the difference in Goal bias for the two forms of aspect was manifested differently in the brain. These results provide novel behavioral and neurocognitive evidence that verb aspect influences the construction of situation models during language comprehension.
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Keyword:
Article
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3371268 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22690039 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2009.04.001
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