We investigate the incremental interpretation of comparative and superlative numeral modifiers by manipulating the speaker’s epistemic state in an eye-tracking reading experiment. The results reveal a different processing profile for two types of numeral modifiers. We take this difference to point to a difference in the source and nature of the attested effects (e.g., Quantity- vs. Manner-based pragmatic reasoning). Our findings inform the existing theoretical landscape, invalidating a number of accounts of speaker ignorance effects with numeral modifiers and giving support to Quantity-based accounts of such effects with superlative modifiers
We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that appear i...
Abstract We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that...
Modified numerals, such as at least three and more than five, are known to sometimes give rise to ig...
We investigate the incremental interpretation of comparative and superlative numeral modifiers by ma...
We investigate the incremental interpretation of comparative and superlative numeral modifiers by ma...
We investigate the incremental interpretation of comparative and superlative numeral modifiers by ma...
Languages have a quite large inventory of expressions to refer to an imprecise quantity such as n ≥ ...
Languages have a quite large inventory of expressions to refer to an imprecise quantity such as n ≥ ...
Languages have a quite large inventory of expressions to refer to an imprecise quantity such as n ≥ ...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
Except for modified numerals that signal precision, like those of the form exactly n, modified numer...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that appear i...
We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that appear i...
Abstract We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that...
Modified numerals, such as at least three and more than five, are known to sometimes give rise to ig...
We investigate the incremental interpretation of comparative and superlative numeral modifiers by ma...
We investigate the incremental interpretation of comparative and superlative numeral modifiers by ma...
We investigate the incremental interpretation of comparative and superlative numeral modifiers by ma...
Languages have a quite large inventory of expressions to refer to an imprecise quantity such as n ≥ ...
Languages have a quite large inventory of expressions to refer to an imprecise quantity such as n ≥ ...
Languages have a quite large inventory of expressions to refer to an imprecise quantity such as n ≥ ...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
Except for modified numerals that signal precision, like those of the form exactly n, modified numer...
We present results of an eye-tracking reading study that directly probes ignorance effects of the su...
We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that appear i...
We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that appear i...
Abstract We present two experiments that probe so-called variation effects of modified numerals that...
Modified numerals, such as at least three and more than five, are known to sometimes give rise to ig...