Comprehension can be enriched by considering what a speaker could have said but did not; namely, the alternative. For example, “Betty passed some of her exams” can be interpreted as “Betty passed some but not all of her exams”. This enriched interpretation is an example of a scalar implicature. We consider whether the salience and use of the alternative are independent processes in the derivation of scalar implicatures or whether use is dependent on salience. Participants completed three sentence interpretation experiments in which the sentences invited scalar implicatures. The experiments used a structural priming paradigm with alternatives and implicatures as primes. We found that (1) adults could be primed to derive scalar implicatures w...
In a series of experiments, Bott and Noveck (2004) found that the computation of scalar inferences, ...
Utterances such as “Megan ate some of the cupcakes ” are often interpreted as “Megan ate some but no...
Understanding language requires comprehenders to understand not only what speakers say, but what spe...
Comprehension can be enriched by considering what a speaker could have said but did not; namely, the...
Sentences can be enriched by considering what the speaker does not say but could have done. Children...
Sentences can be enriched by considering what the speaker does not say but could have done, the alte...
The quantifier "some" often elicits a scalar implicature during comprehension: "Some of today's lett...
Papafragou, AnnaUtterances like "Megan ate some of the cupcakes" are typically interpreted as "Megan...
Scalar implicatures are inferences that arise when a weak expression is used instead of a stronger a...
Scalar implicatures often incur a processing cost in sentence comprehension tasks. We used a novel m...
AbstractScalar implicatures are inferences that arise when a weak expression is used instead of a st...
Scalar implicatures are inferences that arise when a weak expression is used instead of a stronger a...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and Dept. of Linguis...
This is section 5.3. of Interface Strategies-Optimal and Costly Computations, MIT Press, Cambridge M...
There is much current debate about processing scalar implicature, but a considerable body of empiric...
In a series of experiments, Bott and Noveck (2004) found that the computation of scalar inferences, ...
Utterances such as “Megan ate some of the cupcakes ” are often interpreted as “Megan ate some but no...
Understanding language requires comprehenders to understand not only what speakers say, but what spe...
Comprehension can be enriched by considering what a speaker could have said but did not; namely, the...
Sentences can be enriched by considering what the speaker does not say but could have done. Children...
Sentences can be enriched by considering what the speaker does not say but could have done, the alte...
The quantifier "some" often elicits a scalar implicature during comprehension: "Some of today's lett...
Papafragou, AnnaUtterances like "Megan ate some of the cupcakes" are typically interpreted as "Megan...
Scalar implicatures are inferences that arise when a weak expression is used instead of a stronger a...
Scalar implicatures often incur a processing cost in sentence comprehension tasks. We used a novel m...
AbstractScalar implicatures are inferences that arise when a weak expression is used instead of a st...
Scalar implicatures are inferences that arise when a weak expression is used instead of a stronger a...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and Dept. of Linguis...
This is section 5.3. of Interface Strategies-Optimal and Costly Computations, MIT Press, Cambridge M...
There is much current debate about processing scalar implicature, but a considerable body of empiric...
In a series of experiments, Bott and Noveck (2004) found that the computation of scalar inferences, ...
Utterances such as “Megan ate some of the cupcakes ” are often interpreted as “Megan ate some but no...
Understanding language requires comprehenders to understand not only what speakers say, but what spe...