Do you what I say? people reconstruct the syntax of anomalous utterances
Contribuinte(s) |
Abertay University. School of Social & Health Sciences Spanish Government Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) British Academy/Leverhulme Trust Senior Research Fellowship National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
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Data(s) |
03/11/2016
03/11/2016
28/10/2016
07/09/2016
|
Resumo |
We frequently experience and successfully process anomalous utterances. Here we examine whether people do this by ‘correcting’ syntactic anomalies to yield well-formed representations. In two structural priming experiments, participants’ syntactic choices in picture description were influenced as strongly by previously comprehended anomalous (missing-verb) prime sentences as by well-formed prime sentences. Our results suggest that comprehenders can reconstruct the constituent structure of anomalous utterances – even when such utterances lack a major structural component such as the verb. These results also imply that structural alignment in dialogue is unaffected if one interlocutor produces anomalous utterances. |
Identificador |
Ivanova, I. et al. 2016. Do you what I say? people reconstruct the syntax of anomalous utterances. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience. doi: 10.1080/23273798.2016.1236976 2327-3798 (print) 2327-3801 (online) |
Idioma(s) |
en |
Publicador |
Taylor and Francis |
Relação |
Language, Cognition and Neuroscience |
Direitos |
This is the author's accepted version of the manuscript, © 2016 Taylor and Francis, which is under embargo until 28th October 2017. |
Palavras-Chave | #Language comprehension #Sentence processing #Structural priming #Reconstruction #Anomalous sentences #Missing verbs #Reconstruction |
Tipo |
Journal Article published peer-reviewed accepted |