This chapter reviews recent research on speakers’ referential choices in discourse. It focuses on the choice to mention a certain referent first on the one hand, and to produce a pronoun or more elaborate noun phrase on the other. Whereas traditional theories have relied mainly on influence of linguistic context to explain these choices, recent psycholinguistic studies have started investigating the effect of non-linguistic factors as well. Results of these studies suggest that the two referential choices (choice of referent and choice of referring expression) are largely driven by different sets of factors, contrary to the claim that both are related to accessibility of mental representations in memory. The chapter concludes that these fin...
This article describes three production experiments in which the role of the ontology of referents i...
In this paper we discuss referential choice – the process of referential device selection made by th...
Accessibility theory associates more complex referring expressions with less accessible referents. F...
This chapter reviews recent research on speakers’ referential choices in discourse. It focuses on th...
Central to communication are acts of reference, in which speakers clarify to hearers the identity of...
We report two experiments that investigated the widely-held assumption that speakers use the address...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Most theories of reference assume that a referent's saliency in the linguistic context determines th...
Accessibility is one of the most important challenges at the intersection of linguistic and psycholi...
A challenge for most theoretical and computational accounts of linguistic reference is the observati...
Accessibility theory (Ariel, 1988; Gundel, Hedberg, & Zacharski, 1993) proposes that the grammat...
The forms of referring expressions chosen by speakers are not random, as has been shown by the work ...
If speakers communicate efficiently, they should produce more linguistic material when comprehension...
The role of pragmatics in shaping linguistic structures is notoriously difficult to establish in a r...
When referring to an object using a description, speak-ers need to select properties which jointly d...
This article describes three production experiments in which the role of the ontology of referents i...
In this paper we discuss referential choice – the process of referential device selection made by th...
Accessibility theory associates more complex referring expressions with less accessible referents. F...
This chapter reviews recent research on speakers’ referential choices in discourse. It focuses on th...
Central to communication are acts of reference, in which speakers clarify to hearers the identity of...
We report two experiments that investigated the widely-held assumption that speakers use the address...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Most theories of reference assume that a referent's saliency in the linguistic context determines th...
Accessibility is one of the most important challenges at the intersection of linguistic and psycholi...
A challenge for most theoretical and computational accounts of linguistic reference is the observati...
Accessibility theory (Ariel, 1988; Gundel, Hedberg, & Zacharski, 1993) proposes that the grammat...
The forms of referring expressions chosen by speakers are not random, as has been shown by the work ...
If speakers communicate efficiently, they should produce more linguistic material when comprehension...
The role of pragmatics in shaping linguistic structures is notoriously difficult to establish in a r...
When referring to an object using a description, speak-ers need to select properties which jointly d...
This article describes three production experiments in which the role of the ontology of referents i...
In this paper we discuss referential choice – the process of referential device selection made by th...
Accessibility theory associates more complex referring expressions with less accessible referents. F...