When listeners search for the referent of a speaker's expression, they experience interference from privileged knowledge, knowledge outside of their 'common ground' with the speaker. Evidence is presented that this interference reflects limitations in lexical processing. In three experiments, listeners' eye movements were monitored as they searched for the target of a speaker's referring expression in a display that also contained a phonological competitor (e.g., bucket/buckle). Listeners anticipated that the speaker would refer to something in common ground, but they did not experience less interference from a competitor in privileged ground than from a matched competitor in common ground. In contrast, interference from the competitor was ...
This dissertation consists of three studies that examine whether speakers can adjust their speech wh...
This paper presents the results of three experiments that explore the breadth of the relevant discou...
Abstract—When people interpret language, they can reduce the am-biguity of linguistic expressions by...
When listeners search for the referent of a speaker's expression, they experience interference from ...
It has been thought that during conversation, the effect of the history of usage of an expression on...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...
What role does mutual knowledge play in the comprehension process? We compare two answers to this qu...
Interlocutors converge on names to refer to entities. For example, a speaker might refer to a novel ...
One of the most important social cognitive skills in humans is the ability to "put oneself in someon...
International audienceInterlocutors converge on names to refer to entities. For example, a speaker m...
When speakers refer to the same referent multiple times in a conversation, they tend to follow estab...
In order to communicate efficiently, speakers have to take into account which information they share...
In order to communicate successfully, speakers have to take into account which information they shar...
We used the contrastive expectation associated with scalar adjectives to examine whether listeners a...
Recent evidence on the time-course of conversational perspective taking is mixed. Some results sugge...
This dissertation consists of three studies that examine whether speakers can adjust their speech wh...
This paper presents the results of three experiments that explore the breadth of the relevant discou...
Abstract—When people interpret language, they can reduce the am-biguity of linguistic expressions by...
When listeners search for the referent of a speaker's expression, they experience interference from ...
It has been thought that during conversation, the effect of the history of usage of an expression on...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...
What role does mutual knowledge play in the comprehension process? We compare two answers to this qu...
Interlocutors converge on names to refer to entities. For example, a speaker might refer to a novel ...
One of the most important social cognitive skills in humans is the ability to "put oneself in someon...
International audienceInterlocutors converge on names to refer to entities. For example, a speaker m...
When speakers refer to the same referent multiple times in a conversation, they tend to follow estab...
In order to communicate efficiently, speakers have to take into account which information they share...
In order to communicate successfully, speakers have to take into account which information they shar...
We used the contrastive expectation associated with scalar adjectives to examine whether listeners a...
Recent evidence on the time-course of conversational perspective taking is mixed. Some results sugge...
This dissertation consists of three studies that examine whether speakers can adjust their speech wh...
This paper presents the results of three experiments that explore the breadth of the relevant discou...
Abstract—When people interpret language, they can reduce the am-biguity of linguistic expressions by...