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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Verb biases are shaped through lifelong learning.

TLDR
The results suggest that co-occurrence information about specific verbs and syntactic structures embedded in language experiences plays a role in forming, and continuously shaping, the verb biases that constitute a part of the broader representation of the language.
Abstract
Verbs often participate in more than 1 syntactic structure, but individual verbs can be biased in terms of whether they are used more often with 1 structure or the other. For instance, in a sentence such as "Bop the bunny with the flower," the phrase "with the flower" is more likely to indicate an instrument with which to "bop," rather than which "bunny" to bop. Conversely, in a sentence such as "Choose the cow with the flower," the phrase "with the flower" is more likely to indicate which "cow" to choose. An open question is where these biases come from and whether they continue to be shaped in adulthood in a way that has lasting consequences for real-time processing of language. In Experiment 1 we replicated previous findings that these language-wide biases guide online syntactic processing in a computer-based visual-world paradigm. In Experiment 2, we tested the malleability of these biases by exposing adults to initially unbiased verbs situated in unambiguous contexts that led to either instrument or modifier interpretations. During test, participants interpreted sentences containing either modifier- or instrument-trained verbs in ambiguous contexts. Eye-movement and action data show that participants' considerations of the candidate interpretations of the ambiguous with-phrases were guided by the newly learned verb biases. These results suggest that co-occurrence information about specific verbs and syntactic structures embedded in language experiences plays a role in forming, and continuously shaping, the verb biases that constitute a part of the broader representation of the language. (PsycINFO Database Record

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Journal ArticleDOI

Do domain-general executive resources play a role in linguistic prediction? Re-evaluation of the evidence and a path forward

TL;DR: The most compelling evidence is an apparent reduction in predictive behavior during language comprehension in populations with lower executive resources, such as children, older adults, and second language (L2) learners, and it is proposed that these between-population differences can be explained without invoking executive resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autoregressive Generalized Linear Mixed Effect Models with Crossed Random Effects: An Application to Intensive Binary Time Series Eye-Tracking Data

TL;DR: An autoregressive GLMM with crossed random effects that accounts for variability in lag effects across persons and items is presented and is shown to be applicable to intensive binary time series eye-tracking data when researchers are interested in detecting experimental condition effects while controlling for previous responses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comprehenders model the nature of noise in the environment.

TL;DR: This work examines the noise model: the comprehender's implicit model of how noise affects utterances before they are perceived and demonstrates that participants model specific types of errors and make inferences about the intentions of the speaker accordingly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Individual differences in syntactic processing: Is there evidence for reader-text interactions?

TL;DR: Three major syntactic phenomena in the psycholinguistic literature are replicated: use of verb distributional statistics, difficulty of object-versus subject-extracted relative clauses, and resolution of relative clause attachment ambiguities.
Book ChapterDOI

Hippocampal Contributions to Language Use and Processing

TL;DR: This proposal leads to a set of testable predictions and hypotheses about how language and memory work together and argues that efforts to examine the relationship between memory and language are best served by broad-scope approaches that include the study of a range of communicative activities, including those that are characteristic of everyday language use.
References
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Book

Applied multiple regression/correlation analysis for the behavioral sciences

TL;DR: In this article, the Mathematical Basis for Multiple Regression/Correlation and Identification of the Inverse Matrix Elements is presented. But it does not address the problem of missing data.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Psychophysics Toolbox.

David H. Brainard
- 01 Jan 1997 - 
TL;DR: The Psychophysics Toolbox is a software package that supports visual psychophysics and its routines provide an interface between a high-level interpreted language and the video display hardware.
Journal ArticleDOI

The VideoToolbox software for visual psychophysics: transforming numbers into movies.

TL;DR: The VideoToolbox is a free collection of two hundred C subroutines for Macintosh computers that calibrates and controls the computer-display interface to create accurately specified visual stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

The lexical nature of syntactic ambiguity resolution

TL;DR: Reinterpreting syntactic ambiguity resolution as a form of lexical ambiguity resolution obviates the need for special parsing principles to account for syntactic interpretation preferences, and provides a more unified account of language comprehension than was previously available.
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