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Replication of Thierry & Wu (2007): Unconscious translation in bilingual language processing ...
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Viewing angle in novice L2 lexical learning in British Sign Language (BSL) ...
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Visuo-spatial representations in sentence production: A cross-linguistic comparison of the effect of reading direction in first- and second-language ...
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Linguistic Complexity and Planning Effects on Word Duration in Hindi Read Aloud Speech
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In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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Do people do structural reanalysis when they encounter an implausible sentence? ...
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Yu, Yue. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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Now you hear me, later you don’t: The Immediacy of Linguistic Computation and the Representation of Speech ...
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Recruitment of Prior Knowledge during Sleep-Based Consolidation of Phonotactic Patterns for Speech Production ...
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Testing the Gleam-Glum Effect with the Bouba-Kiki Paradigm (Adult) ...
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Do adults with dyslexia have syntactic processing difficulties that affect their word learning through reading as they read syntactically complex passages? ...
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Effects of social status perception on lexical alignment ...
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The effect of object labels on adults’ novel object recognition ...
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Does the language you speak shape the way you think about the world? ...
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Using narrative to manipulate perceived mind and word order during language production ...
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Abstract:
Describing interactions between objects often requires the speaker to choose a perspective and mention one object first and the other second. Speakers have a tendency to make the most animate object in a scene the subject of a sentence, and to mention this object first (Prat-Sala & Branigan, 2000). For example, it is more common to say the man ran away from the dog rather than the dog chased the man, therefore taking the perspective of the man. This animacy bias is considered to occur because of the way speakers perceive animacy: on a hierarchy, with humans at the top and concepts or inanimate objects below (Harris, 1978; Aissen, 2003). The current experiment follows on from the work detailed in a previous pre-registration, Study 1, which can be found here: https://osf.io/a5fby. Speakers viewed scenes of humans and robot interacting, and described these interactions using transitive sentences (e.g. “Fred is dancing with Botz”). We found speakers would reliably mention the human first and the robot ...
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Keyword:
animacy; Cognition and Perception; Cognitive Psychology; FOS Languages and literature; FOS Psychology; language biases; Linguistics; mind perception; perspective taking; Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics; Psychology; Social and Behavioral Sciences; Social Psychology; social robotics; word order
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URL: https://osf.io/8zxyk/ https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/8zxyk
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The effect of repeating object and word pairings on adults novel object recognition ...
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